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Suggestions of similar film to Dreams from My Real Father
There are 1 films with the same director, 8963 with the same cinematographic genres, 8199 films with the same themes (including 515 films with the same 3 themes than
Dreams from My Real Father), to have finally
70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked
Dreams from My Real Father, you will probably like those similar films :
Origin USAGenres DocumentaryThemes Films set in Africa,
Films about racism,
Documentary films about racism,
Documentary films about law,
Documentary films about war,
Documentary films about historical events,
Documentaire sur une personnalité,
Documentary films about politics,
Political filmsRating80%
To a large extent, the film consists of interviews with genocide survivors, many of whom were children in 1994. In all, over thirty survivors, perpetrators, and experts were interviewed for the film. In these interviews, the survivors discuss what it means to be a Rwandan and to live next door to people who killed their families. The survivors describe how they deal with their country's request that they forgive one another and move on, so that Rwanda can rebuild and unify itself. Perpetrators' views illuminate the madness that seized the culture in 1994; exploring the experience of apologizing to victims, and examining what it is like to be looked at as a murderer in Rwandan society. , 1h20
Origin USAGenres War,
Documentary,
HistoricalThemes Films about families,
Documentary films about war,
Documentary films about historical events,
Documentaire sur une personnalité,
Documentary films about politics,
Political films,
Alternate history filmsRating69%
VIRTUAL JFK investigates one of the most debated "what if" scenarios in the history of U.S. foreign policy: What would President John F. Kennedy have done in Vietnam if he had not been assassinated in 1963, and had he been re-elected in 1964? The film employs what Harvard historian Niall Ferguson calls "virtual history," assessing the plausibility of counterfactuals - "what ifs" - and the outcomes they might have produced. The heart of the film deals with the question: Does it matter who is president on issues of war and peace?, 1h29
Origin USAGenres DocumentaryThemes Documentary films about historical events,
Documentaire sur une personnalité,
Documentary films about politics,
Political filmsRating78%
The film tells the story of Rice's life from her birth in 1954 to her 2009 departure from office as Secretary of State, and her return to Stanford University. Rice is a key interviewee in the film: she speaks about her roots in racially explosive Birmingham; her short-lived music career; her fascination with Joseph Stalin and Ronald Reagan; her close friendship with George W. Bush; right up to a defense of her record in government. The film gives voice to numerous supporters of Rice, including both Presidents Bush; her stepmother Clara Bailey Rice; Oprah Winfrey (who remarks that "I've never been more proud to say the word W-O-M-A-N than after meeting Condoleezza Rice"); mentor and later critic, Brent Scowcroft; her former fiancé, Rick Upchurch; John McCain who praises her as "a great American"; former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger; Dick Cheney; and Arnold Schwarzenegger.