Children of the Revolution is a 2010 documentary by Irish filmmaker Shane O'Sullivan about Ulrike Meinhof and Fusako Shigenobu, leaders of the German Red Army Faction and the Japanese Red Army.
Inspired by the student revolutions of 1968 and appalled by the killing in Vietnam, Meinhof and Shigenobu set out to destroy capitalist power through world revolution. They travelled to the Middle East to train with Palestinian militants and, alongside Leila Khaled, became the leading female revolutionaries of their time.
Authors and journalists Bettina Röhl and Mei Shigenobu explore the lives of their mothers, Ulrike and Fusako, providing a unique perspective on two of the most notorious terrorists in contemporary history. On the run or kidnapped when their mothers went underground, May and Bettina emerged from difficult childhoods to lead their own extraordinary lives. They reflect on their mother's actions as the film asks: what were they fighting for and what have we learned.
Shot in Tokyo, Beirut, Jordan and Germany, the film tells the stories of Meinhof and Shigenobu through the eyes of May and Bettina, using rare archive footage of student protests and guerilla training camps in Germany, Japan and the Middle East.
The film premiered at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in November 2010 and has screened at several international festivals. It had its broadcast premiere on German channel Westdeutscher Rundfunk on May 30, 2011 and will be released on DVD in the United Kingdom in September 2011.Synopsis
Inspirées par les révolutions étudiantes de 1968, deux femmes, Ulrike Meinhof et Fusako Shigenobu, respectivement en Allemagne et au Japon ont commandité les groupes révolutionnaires des Red Army Faction (Rotee Armee Fraktion) et Japanese Red Army (日本赤軍). Pour quelle cause se sont-elles battues et qu'ont-elles tiré de cela ?
Actors