The authorship of The Associated Press’s renowned “napalm girl” photograph is being called into question in the new documentary “The Stringer,” which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in Utah
A two-year investigation uncovers a scandal behind the making of one of the most-recognized photographs of the 20th century. Five decades of secrets are unraveled in the search for justice for a man known only as “the stringer.
Sundance Film Festival begins Thursday in Park City, Utah. Many in the movie business continue to deal with the devastating fallout from the Los Angeles-area wildfires, but some are decamping to the mountains for fresh air,
The battle heats up between indie journalists and the Associated Press over a movie questioning the author of an iconic Vietnam image.
PARK CITY, Utah — Saturday night in Park City saw the world premiere of “The Stringer,” which calls into question the origins of one of the most famous photographs ever taken. Directed by ...
David Osit’s stunning “Predators” is much more than another attempt to interrogate our international obsession with true crime culture. It’s also an act of courage, confronting an increasingly vigilante-driven mindset that never pauses to understand that which is correctly considered vile, choosing instead to turn it into entertainment.
The 2025 edition of the Sundance Film Festival finds filmmakers tackling prickly material with a warmer lens — or avoiding it altogether.
PARK CITY, Utah — Ten days before the premiere of the documentary “The Stringer” at the Sundance ... the film’s claims to The Post, noting its “damage to Nick Ut’s well-deserved ...
Director Bao Nguyen returns to Sundance with a documentary that questions the authorship of the Pulitzer Prize-winning photo known as the 'napalm girl'
Kim Phuc was in Trang Bang, Vietnam, in 1972 when napalm dropped on the town. She became known as the "napalm girl" when the photo won the Pulitzer Prize.
A new documentary purports that a Pulitzer Prize-winning Associated Press photographer did not take a picture that became a hallmark image from the Vietnam War. The photo’s subject begs to differ. In a blistering statement,