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Hot Docs 2006 ( Toronto )
International Documentary Festival of Marseille 2006
Dubai International Film Festival 2006
DocuDays 2006 (Beirut)
New Cinema Festival 2006 (Montreal)
Visions du réel 2007 (Nyon)
It's All True 2007 (Brazil)
and more...
Quebec – Canada, 2006,
Digital Video,
Color,
75 / 52 min.
Researched, Written and
Directed by: Jean-Daniel Lafond
Research Associate and Assistant Director: Fred A. Reed
Photography: Vahid Farouz
Alberto Feio
Jean-Daniel Lafond
Sound Recording: Nezam Kiaie
Jean-Denis Daoust
Jean-Daniel Lafond
Edited by: Babalou Hamelin
Sound Design: Benoît Dame
Music: Charles Papasoff
Sound Mix: Dany Ouellet
Produced by: Nathalie Barton
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**** "This gripping doc might be controversial,
but it certainly thinks big"
The Montreal Gazette
**** "A captivating documentary"
Nicolas Houle – Le Soleil
**** "Convincing, gripping, moving"
Daniel Rioux – Le Journal de Montréal
"A smartly balanced and probing documentary"
Geoff Pevere – Toronto Star
"A compelling portrait"
Brian D. Johnson – Maclean's
When in 2001 Iranian director Mohsen Makmalbaf’s
feature film Kandahar was acclaimed in
Cannes and shown around the world, the international press picked
up on a surprising appearance. The film’s African-American “doctor” was
in fact a man called David Belfield, wanted in the United States
for murder, and now living in exile in Iran.
American Fugitive: The Truth About Hassan tells
the story of this wanted man, an American—known in Iran as
Hassan Abdulrahman—who says: "There is life after America." Through this story of an unrepentant assassin who openly
accuses “the real culprits,” another tale emerges:
that of covert networks, international political manipulation,
and state-sponsored violence.
In Washington D.C. in the summer
of 1980, at the behest of Iranian intelligence, an African-American
named David Belfield shot dead Ali Akbar Tabatabai, the former
press attaché and representative
of the Shah at the Iranian embassy. Tabatabai was thought to be involved
in a plot to kill the Supreme Leader, the Ayatollah Khomeini, and
topple the new regime.
American Fugitive: The Truth About
Hassan tells
the story of a young African American's sudden awareness of race
in the United States in the aftermath of the killing of Martin
Luther King, and of his long-running personal confrontation with
Uncle Sam that began with the Black Power movement of the 1970s
and the rise of Islam in the United States. The confrontation
continues to this day, as David Belfield alias Dawud Salahuddin
alias Hassan Abdulrahman remains on the FBI's most wanted list.
Exiled in Iran for the last 25 years, Hassan is a sharp-eyed
observer and first-hand witness to several of the events that have
shaped relations between Islamic Iran and his native America. His
story is also that of US domestic and foreign policies and their
role in the Middle East crisis.
In American Fugitive:
The Truth About Hassan, we
meet Americans who question their country’s domestic and
foreign policies and their impact on the conflict between the Western
world and Islamic countries. Featuring interviews with Joseph Trento,
an investigative journalist specializing in espionage, Gary Sick,
who served on the National Security Council staff of President
Carter, and the assassinated man’s twin brother, the film
raises grave questions about the convergence between Iran 's conservative
clerical rulers and their neo-conservative counterparts in Washington.
American Fugitive: The Truth About Hassan provides
rare insight into one of the most critical issues of our time, and
into the soul of a man with no place to go.
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