Review: In ‘Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten,’ Cambodia’s Lost Generation of Pop Stars 11:37 pmNY Times, NYT > MoviesNo comments Musicians of a thriving pop music scene in Cambodia that was brutally stamped out by the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s reclaim their place in the global youth culture of their era. Share This: Facebook Twitter Google+ Stumble Digg Related Posts:Review: ‘Insurgent’ Brandishes a Tougher Shailene WoodleyIn the second of the “Divergent” series of dystopic action films, Tris Prior, the lead character, is a more comfortable lock-and-load renegade. … Read MoreReview: Al Pacino in ‘Danny Collins’ Plays a Dissolute Pop StarIn Dan Fogelman’s comic drama, a 40-year-old letter from John Lennon could change a jaded older singer’s life. … Read MoreReview: ‘Growing Up and Other Lies’ Stares Down the Advent of AdulthoodThe film centers on a group of men who walk the length of Manhattan in a vain attempt to recapture the euphoria of their early 20s. … Read MoreReview: In Eugène Green’s ‘La Sapienza,’ a Search of Ideals of CivilizationThough set in the present, “La Sapienza,” which takes its name from a venerable university in Rome, finds inspiration and sustenance in the past. … Read MoreMovie Listings for March 20-26A guide to movies playing at theaters in the New York City area, as well as select festivals and film series.… Read More
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