'Free Chol Soo Lee' wins Documentary Emmy
이 글자크기로 변경됩니다.
(예시) 가장 빠른 뉴스가 있고 다양한 정보, 쌍방향 소통이 숨쉬는 다음뉴스를 만나보세요. 다음뉴스는 국내외 주요이슈와 실시간 속보, 문화생활 및 다양한 분야의 뉴스를 입체적으로 전달하고 있습니다.
Documentary film "Free Chol Soo Lee" won an award at the 45th News & Documentary Emmy Awards on Thursday, its distributor Connect Pictures said.
It won in the Outstanding Historical Documentary category.
Directed by Julie Ha and Eugene Yi, the film follows a young Korean American named Chol Soo Lee who was wrongly imprisoned for the assassination of Chinese gang leader Yip Yee Tak.
Lee was arrested by the police for murdering Tak in San Francisco's Chinatown in 1973. He was later convicted and given the death penalty due to a lack of support and inaccurate testimonies from white witnesses who were unable to distinguish Asian features, resulting in him ultimately serving 10 years in a California prison before his release. His death sentence sparked the first nationwide Asian movement in the United States, confronting racism against Asian Americans and issues within the criminal justice system, called the “Free Chol Soo Lee Movement.”
The film was also nominated in two other categories of the awards ceremony for Best Documentary and Outstanding Promotional Announcement: Documentary.
“Free Chol Soo Lee” was released on Oct. 18, 2023, and was invited to numerous film festivals, including the Sundance Film Festival in 2022 and the Busan International Film Festival the same year. It was also the runner-up for the 2021 Library of Congress Lavine Ken Burns Prize for Film.
The annual News & Documentary Emmy Awards honor the best U.S. news and documentary programs released the previous year. This year’s ceremony for the documentary categories was held on Sept. 26 at the Palladium Times Square in New York City.
Another documentary involving Korea, “Crush” (2023) was also nominated for the 45th News & Documentary Emmy Awards’ Outstanding Investigative Documentary categories, but failed to take home an award. The two-part Paramount+ docuseries produced by Jeff Zimbalist and Stu Schreiberg tells the story of the deadly Itaewon disaster in 2022.
BY KIM JI-YE [kim.jiye@joongang.co.kr]
Copyright © 코리아중앙데일리. 무단전재 및 재배포 금지.
- Absence of NewJeans could cost HYBE $27 million
- Netflix’s 'Culinary Class Wars': Meet the Black Spoon chefs shaking up Korea’s dining scene (Part 1)
- [WHY] Korean online communities marked by diversity, intensity and a tad of toxicity
- Netflix’s 'Culinary Class Wars': Meet the Black Spoon chefs shaking up Korea’s dining scene (Part 2)
- Top golfers jet in for 2024 Hana Financial Group Championship
- 'I have to [expletive] win': Min Hee-jin will sell her house to fight HYBE in court
- Consumers boycott Synnara Record after links to cult revealed
- NCT's Jaehyun to leave fans speechless with pre-enlistment 'Mute' concert
- Seoul to flush out 'dumping' tours that involve forced shopping, little culture
- How Fifty Fifty beat the odds: Music industry insiders, experts address success at MU:CON