Film shows real truth behind 'Napalm Girl' photo
The Stringer,' a controversial new Sundance documentary about the origins of the 'napalm girl' photo, is sparking controversy.
The Times spoke to team behind "The Stringer" and an attorney for former AP photographer Nick Ut about the film's claims that Ut did not take the photo known as "Napalm Girl."
The Stringer” at Sundance alleges the famed Vietnam War photo “The Terror of War,” or “Napalm Girl,” was not taken by Nick Ut. The AP and Ut deny the claims.
A new Sundance documentary, which questions the provenance of a Vietnam War icon, has set off a pitched battle between photojournalists and the filmmakers.
The Associated Press says it is "ready to review any and all evidence and new information" regarding the Pulitzer Prize-winning photo of a naked girl running from a napalm attack credited to AP staffer Nick Ut,
A controversial new documentary film claims to have uncovered a scandal behind one of the most iconic wartime photographs of the 20th century.
Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Nick Ut (with framed picture), flanked by Kim Phuc, known as the "Napalm Girl", shows his Vietnam war photo as they wait to meet Pope Francis in St Peter's Square,
Bao Nguyen Logline: 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.
It is she who should be remembered these nearly 50 years after one of the most famous photos of all time was captured on the road from Trang Bang.
The 'Napalm Girl' photographed changed the world's view of the Vietnam War, but this film claims that it's been attributed to the wrong man for 50 years
In an essay, retired NCR editor Tom Fox recalls his years in Vietnam, his personal connection with the Kim Phúc story, and the silence behind a powerful and defining image of the Vietnam War.