Screenings

Saturday 11. 04. 16:00

Malá scéna

Language: English, Vietnamese
Subtitles: Czech

All screenings

Child of Dust

(Dziecko z pyłu)

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.

Czech Competition

Basic information about the film

TitleChild of Dust
Original LanguageEnglish, Vietnamese
Zněníoriginal 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)
PremiéraCzech distribution premiere
Film typeFull-length documentary
Year of Production2025
Country of OriginCzech Republic, Poland, Qatar, Sweden, Vietnam
Length93 min.
Director Weronika Mliczewska
Sales producent
Michal Sikora
michal@lonelypro.cz

Guests attending the post-screening debate

Hynek Kmoníček

All screenings

Malá scéna
Havlíčkova 621, Ústí nad Orlicí

Discussion
Hynek Kmoníček,
Language: English, Vietnamese
Subtitles: Czech

Czech Competition

Two people are sitting next to each other and concentrating on something in the hands of one of them.

Full-length documentary

What About Petey?

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.