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The Forgotten Woman is a 2008 Canadian documentary film directed by Dilip Mehta and written by Deepa Mehta. The film is about widows in India and was inspired by Deepa Mehta's 2005 Academy Award-nominated film on the same subject, Water. [1] [2]
The film was made over a span of ten years. The documentary features filmmaker Barbara Sonneborn as she goes to the Vietnamese countryside where her husband was killed. Her translator is a fellow war widow named Xuan Ngoc Nguyen and together, the two women try to understand their losses. The film includes interviews with Vietnamese and American ...
Films about widowhood in the United States (86 P) Pages in category "Widowhood in the United States" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.
Morris from America; N. Nanny McPhee; The Night House; O. Oliver the Eighth; ... The Widow (1955 film) Widows (2011 film) Wish You Were Here (1987 film) Woman in the ...
The American Widow Project has been nationally recognized by a multitude of media outlets such as: ABC news with Bob Woodruff, [3] NPR, [4] CNN, [5] CBS, [6] ABC News, [7] Military.com, [8] The Washington Times, [9] USAA Magazine, [10] [11] Los Angeles Times, [12] The Fayetteville Observer, [13] San Marcos Daily Record, [14] The Huffington Post ...
Grey Gardens is a 1975 American documentary film by Albert and David Maysles.The film depicts the everyday lives of two reclusive, upper-class women, a mother and daughter both named Edith Beale, who lived in poverty at Grey Gardens, a derelict mansion at 3 West End Road in the wealthy Georgica Pond neighborhood of East Hampton, New York.
Some Kind of Heaven is a 2020 American documentary film about The Villages, Florida, the world's largest retirement community.Marking the directorial feature debut of Lance Oppenheim, the film is a stylized portrait of four residents living within The Villages, struggling to find happiness and meaning in life's final chapters.
Defending Our Lives is a 1993 American short documentary film directed by Margaret Lazarus, Stacey Kabat and Renner Wunderlich. It won an Oscar at the 66th Academy Awards in 1994 for Documentary Short Subject. [1]