Children of Beslan

Children of Beslan is a 2005 documentary film about the Beslan school siege directed by Ewa Ewart and Leslie Woodhead for the BBC. In the United States the documentary aired on HBO. Tony Perry of the Los Angeles Times stated that the film recounts survivors' testimonies and does not explore political aspects, nor assigns blame to any party.[1]

History

Ewart went to Beslan in November 2004 to compile footage for the film, interviewing 140 subjects, all children who were held prisoner in the incident.[2] Adults were not interviewed.[1] In May 2009 Ewart went back to Beslan to do follow-up coverage.[2]

The footage alternates between interviews and primary source material. The documentary does not use narration,[1] nor does it depict the voices of interviewers. It has inter-titles to show the chronology of the siege.[3]

Brian Lowry of Variety wrote that it was "chillingly effective in driving these horrific events home" but that it was exploiting its interviewees and "in most ways inferior to" a documentary on Beslan by Wide Angle.[4] Dana Sevens of Slate gave a positive review.[3]

gollark: Why would there be lower frequency sounds in the 16kHz?
gollark: But you'd only get higher frequencies like that.
gollark: Oh, different things, I see.
gollark: A square wave decomposes into infinitely many sines. Can't do that to sines.
gollark: What do you mean "infinite overtones"? I don't think that's how sine waves work.

References

  1. Perry, Tony (2005-09-01). "TELEVISION REVIEW The voices of innocence lost". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2017-12-24.
  2. Ewart, Eva (2005-09-01). "The children of Beslan five years on". BBC. Retrieved 2017-12-24.
  3. Stevens, Dana (2005-09-01). "Children of Beslan". Slate. Retrieved 2017-12-24.
  4. Lowry, Brian (2005-08-30). "Children of Beslan". Variety. Retrieved 2017-12-24.


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