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NAATA cordially invites you to attend the Opening Night Gala of the 18th San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival

SCREENING
THURSDAY, MARCH 9
7:00 PM SOLD OUT
KAB309A

AMC Kabuki 8 Theatres
1881 Post Street

San Francisco

THURSDAY, MARCH 9 9:30 PM
KAB309A SOLD OUT

Golden Circle Gala Reception
with director Deann Borshay

Fort Mason Center
Conference Center
Landmark Bldg. A
San Francisco

Second screening at
Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley
WED 3/15 7:30 PM
PFA315A SOLD OUT



Director/Producer/Writer Deann BORSHAY

Exec. Prod.
Vivian KLEIMAN


Assoc. Prod.
Scott TSUCHITANI


Editor/Co-Writer
Vivien HILLGROVE

Cinematography

Michael CHIN


Sound
Sara CHIN

 

FIRST PERSON PLURAL

USA/Korea, 2000, 56 mins, video, color,
English & Korean w/e.s.

The day I left Korea, the director of the orphanage took me to the airport. He didn't say a word the whole time. Finally, when it was time for me to board the plane, he turned to me and said, "Don't tell them who you really are until you're old enough to take care of yourself." The next thing I knew, he nudged me toward the plane and walked away.

In 1966, at the age of nine, Deann Borshay came to the United States from South Korea as one of tens of thousands of children adopted by white American families after the Korean War. She arrived at the San Francisco International Airport confused, alone, unable to speak English, and was instantly swept away to the manicured lawns of middle-class suburban California, her home for the next 30 years.

Her adoptive family had been told she was an orphan named Cha Jung Hee, with whom they had developed a slight relationship through letters via the Foster Parent's Plan. She was, in fact, someone entirely different, a look-alike replacement named Kang Ok Jin, sent when the other girl's mother abruptly changed her mind. Old enough to remember Korea but too young to protest or communicate her situation, Jung Hee/Ok Jin eventually became the young American Deann Borshay, and no one knew the difference. Childhood memories collided with the "truth" of her adoption papers, and over time, everything about Korea--language,
culture, name, identity, even the existence of another family in Korea--faded away.

FIRST PERSON PLURAL, Borshay's debut film, is a personal documentary exploring the complicated landscape of assimilation, adoption, cultural difference, American attitudes and mistaken identity. Drawing upon original and archival material--including extensive 8mm home movies documenting everything from Borshay's arrival in the US to her first bath, her first Christmas, family vacations, and scenes from daily life--FIRST PERSON PLURAL traverses a difficult and intimate terrain. Borshay's struggle to confront the secrets of her childhood and reconcile the demands of two families, two cultures and two nations reveals a poignant story about loss and finding a new way home.

-Jean Cheng

Presented with Association of Korean Adoptees of San Francisco, Film Arts Foundation (FAF), Independent Television Service (ITVS),
Korean Community Center of the East Bay


Talk about this film and other festival films at the SFIAAFF Club at Click2Asia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




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