Photo: Courtesy of Thet Sambath 
Thet  Sambath, filmmaker of the 'Enemies of the People', talking to former  Khmer Rouge leader Nuon Chea.
“The  reaction has been, in general, very different from different kinds of  people, but all the way across it’s been extremely positive.”  
The Khmer Rouge documentary “Enemies  of the People” has been selected for a second round in the upcoming  Academy Awards and has begun screening coast to coast among the academic  community.
The film follows the journey of  journalist Thet Sambath as he searches for the truth behind the Khmer  Rouge killings, through testimony of low-level soldiers up through  “Brother No. 2,” Nuon Chea.
“The academic presentations are  really important,” said Rob Lemkin, who co-produced the film with Theth  Sambath. “That's because there is a lot of information and a lot of  ideas in 'Enemies of the People' and in Sambath's work.”
Thet Sambath spent years  building confidence with Khmer Rouge cadre and Nuon Chea, and the film  gives vivid description of killings performed in the name of the regime.  In it, Nuon Chea says that “enemies of the people” were to be  destroyed, lest they subvert the regime's policies.
Nuon Chea, the senior-most  leader in custody at the Khmer Rouge tribunal, is currently awaiting  trial on atrocity charges.
The film has been screened for  professors and students of political science, human rights, law,  genocide and Southeast Asian studies over the past weeks.
“The reaction has been, in  general, very different from different kinds of people, but all the way  across it’s been extremely positive,” Lemkin said, adding that some  universities wanted to use the film as part of their education courses.
Christine Su, assistant director  of the Southeast Asian Center for International Studies at Ohio  University, where the film was screened earlier this month, said it  would help promote “Khmer issues.”
For Sinuon Kim, a student at the  university, the film showed Nuon Chea's powerful personality. After  seeing the film, she said, “I do believe that it's possible that just he  and Pol Pot both were the ones who made the decisions.”










