Full-length documentary
Resilience
Humans can act as nature’s defenders or as an invasive species. While conservationist Pavel strives to ease environmental anxiety and become one with the land, Klára is hot on the trail of a bird poisoner.
This haunting film, infused with longing and hope, follows Sang, a Vietnamese man who, after years of living on the margins of society, takes a courageous step: to meet his American father for the first time.
Sang is a child of the Vietnam War. Born to a local mother and an American soldier, he grew up—like many children abandoned by foreign troops—in poverty and isolation. Yet he chooses to confront his lifelong trauma and set out to trace the identity of his long-absent father. To meet his American family, Sang must first leave home and embark on an uncertain journey across fractured roots. Will he recover a lost childhood, or open a new wound? This sensitive film explores a forgotten chapter of global relations, historical trauma, and the failure of American society to take responsibility for its past.
| Title | Child of Dust |
|---|---|
| Original Language | English, Vietnamese |
| Znění | original audio, children’s films dubbed in Czech |
| Subtitles | Czech subtitles, select films have descriptive Czech or English subtitles (look for the accessibility icons next to each screening) |
| Premiéra | Czech distribution premiere |
| Film type | Full-length documentary |
| Year of Production | 2025 |
| Country of Origin | Czech Republic, Poland, Qatar, Sweden, Vietnam |
| Length | 93 min. |
| Tags | Asia, North America |
| Director | Weronika Mliczewska |
| Sales |
producent Michal Sikora michal@lonelypro.cz |
|
The Town Theatre Český Krumlov
|
Discussion Weronika Mliczewska, Director of the film |
Tickets Detail |
Full-length documentary
Humans can act as nature’s defenders or as an invasive species. While conservationist Pavel strives to ease environmental anxiety and become one with the land, Klára is hot on the trail of a bird poisoner.
Full-length documentary
This intimate portrait of the relationship between a father and his son on the autism spectrum captures both the difficulty and the strength inherent in everyday caregiving. At the same time, it exposes the limits of a system that too often relies on the sacrifices of others.