Summaries

Mark Brecke's They Turned Our Desert Into Fire tells the story of the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Darfur, Sudan through the perspectives of Amtrak passengers during a three-day, cross-country train trip. In dramatic contrast to the benign American landscape outside the train, Mark's photographic images of desolation, death, and human suffering in the burned out villages of Darfur and refugee camps of Chad confront one after another of twelve train passengers. Complementing the photographs are moving accounts of Mark's experiences and a comprehensive expert analysis, which illuminates the full dimensions of the crisis and raises serious questions about the world's apparently willful indifference to it. For the twelve passengers, and thus the film's audience, a cross-country train trip becomes an enlightening and emotional journey through an indifferent American media landscape into the heart of the Darfur tragedy.—Mark Beers

Details

Keywords
  • photographer
  • genocide
  • sudan
  • darfur
Genres
  • War
  • Documentary
Release date Oct 19, 2007
Countries of origin United States
Official sites Official site
Language English Arabic
Filming locations Chad
Production companies Global Contact Films Purebred Productions

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 1h 28m
Color Color
Aspect ratio 1.78 : 1

Synopsis

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