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'''''Unclaimed''''' is a 2013 Canadian documentary film about a man who claims to be former [[Special Forces (United States Army)|Special Forces Green Beret]] Master Sgt. John Hartley Robertson, who was declared dead after being shot down over [[Laos]] in a 1968 classified mission.<ref>The [[Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office]] lists John Hartley Robinson as presumed dead. {{cite web|url=http://www.dtic.mil/dpmo/vietnam/reports/documents/pmsea_info_r019.htm|title=ROBERTSON, JOHN HARTLEY|work=DPMO Web Site|publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]]|accessdate=26 April 2013}}</ref> Directed by [[Michael Jorgensen]], the film premiered on April 30, 2013 at the [[Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival]].
'''''Unclaimed''''' is a 2013 Canadian documentary film about a man who claims to be former [[Special Forces (United States Army)|Special Forces Green Beret]] Master Sgt. John Hartley Robertson, who was declared dead after being shot down over [[Laos]] in a 1968 classified mission. The documentary is written, directed, and produced by [[Michael Jorgensen]]. It follows Tom Faunce, a veteran of the [[Vietnam War]], in tracking down the man who claimed to be Robertson. Faunce was skeptical of Robertson's identity but eventually became convinced. He convinced Jorgensen to make a documentary about Robertson's story as a way to unite the man with his American family.

Leading up to the film's release, the validity of Robertson's identity was challenged by groups of Vietnam War veterans and groups that advocate the [[Vietnam War POW/MIA issue]]. Jean Robertson-Holley, Robertson's surviving sister, was convinced the man was her brother but initially declined DNA testing as unnecessary. Eventually she and her daughter (and Robertson's niece) Gail Metcalf expressed openness to going through with testing. The documentary was screened at the [[Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival]] on {{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013. A day later, ''[[The Independent]]'' reported the contents of a memo from a 2009 report by the [[Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office]] that the man who claimed to be Robertson was actually Dang Tan Ngoc, "a 76-year-old Vietnamese citizen of French origin who has a history of pretending to be US army veterans".<ref name="hall" />


==Synopsis==
==Synopsis==
Line 35: Line 37:
==Production==
==Production==


''Unclaimed'' is written, directed, and produced by [[Michael Jorgensen]]. A veteran of the [[Vietnam War]], Tom Faunce, had been on a humanitarian mission in southeast Asia in 2008 when he learned about John Hartley Robertson, a fellow soldier who was reported killed in action in the war, still alive in Vietnam. Faunce was skeptical when meeting Robertson but was eventually convinced of his identity. Faunce then contacted Jorgensen in 2012 to appeal to him to make a documentary as a way to help Robertson reunite with his family. Jorgensen was also skeptical but became convinced to make the documentary about Robertson. The filmmaker said he experienced difficulty with the U.S. military in making the documentary, such as being unable to contact Robertson's family. Jorgensen said a government source told him, "It's not that the Vietnamese won't let him (Robertson) go; it's that our government doesn't want him."<ref name="barnard">{{cite news | last=Barnard | first=Linda | url=http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2013/04/25/hot_docs_premiere_unclaimed_finds_a_vietnam_veteran_left_behind_for_44_years.html | title=Hot Docs premiere Unclaimed finds a Vietnam veteran left behind for 44 years | work=[[Toronto Star]] | date={{nowrap|April 25}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 25}}, 2013 }}</ref>
''Unclaimed'' is written, directed, and produced by [[Michael Jorgensen]]. A veteran of the [[Vietnam War]], Tom Faunce, had been on a humanitarian mission in southeast Asia in 2008 when he learned about John Hartley Robertson, a fellow soldier who was reported killed in action in the war, still alive in Vietnam. Faunce was skeptical when meeting Robertson but was eventually convinced of his identity. Faunce then contacted Jorgensen in 2012 to appeal to him to make a documentary as a way to help Robertson reunite with his family. Jorgensen was also skeptical but became convinced to make the documentary about Robertson. The filmmaker said he experienced difficulty with the U.S. military in making the documentary, such as being unable to contact Robertson's family. Jorgensen said a government source told him, "It's not that the Vietnamese won't let him (Robertson) go; it's that our government doesn't want him." When Jorgensen was asked if he believed the man's identity, he replied, "It does not matter what I think. There's no doubt in the family."<ref name="barnard">{{cite news | last=Barnard | first=Linda | url=http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2013/04/25/hot_docs_premiere_unclaimed_finds_a_vietnam_veteran_left_behind_for_44_years.html | title=Hot Docs premiere Unclaimed finds a Vietnam veteran left behind for 44 years | work=[[Toronto Star]] | date={{nowrap|April 25}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 25}}, 2013 }}</ref>


==Validity of identity==
==Validity of identity==


===Lead-up to film premiere===
The documentary provides the following for physical proof{{Clarify|May 2013|date=May 2013}}: evidence of{{Citation needed|May 2013|date=May 2013}} Robertson's birthplace, Robertson being recognized by a soldier who was trained by him in 1960, and Robertson also being recognized by his surviving sister, 80-year-old Jean Robertson-Holley. Robertson had been fingerprinted at a U.S. embassy in 2010. Faunce said he was told, "There's not enough proof to prove this is John Hartley Robertson. And I responded, 'There's not enough proof to prove he isn't.'"<ref name="barnard" />

With the publicity of ''Unclaimed'', the identity of the man who claimed to be Robertson was challenged. In the documentary, the ''Toronto Star'' reported the case made, "There is physical proof of Robertson's birthplace, collected in dramatic fashion onscreen; a tearful meeting in Vietnam with a soldier who was trained by Robertson in 1960 and said he knew him on sight; and a heart-wrenching reunion with his only surviving sister — 80-year-old Jean Robertson-Holly [sic]." Leading up to the film's premiere, Jorgensen said Robertson's American wife and two children had volunteered to participate in DNA testing but withdrew their intent. The filmmaker said, "Somebody suggested to me maybe that's (because) the daughters don't want to know if it's him. It's kind of like, that was an ugly war. It was a long time ago. We just want it to go away... I don't know. What would compel you not to want to know if this person is your biological father?"<ref name="barnard" />


{{Rquote|right|The film is already generating heated debate online, along with allegations the man claiming to be Robertson is a fraud.|''Toronto Star''<ref name="barnard2" />}}
Jorgensen said Robertson's American wife and two children volunteered to participate in DNA testing but withdrew their intent. The filmmaker said, "Somebody suggested to me maybe that's (because) the daughters don't want to know if it's him. It's kind of like, that was an ugly war. It was a long time ago. We just want it to go away... I don't know. What would compel you not to want to know if this person is your biological father?" The sister, Robertson-Holley, said it was "not necessary" to conduct DNA testing since she confidently identifies the man as her brother.<ref name="barnard" /> Some groups of Vietnam War veterans and groups that advocate the [[Vietnam War POW/MIA issue]] questioned Robertson's identity.<ref name="barnard2">{{cite news | last=Barnard | first=Linda | url=http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2013/04/30/hot_docs_missing_vietnam_vets_niece_coming_to_unclaimed_world_premiere.html | title=Hot Docs: Missing Vietnam vet's niece coming to Unclaimed world premiere | work=[[Toronto Star]] | date={{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013 }}</ref> The ''Toronto Star'' reported, "The film is already generating heated debate online, along with allegations the man claiming to be Robertson is a fraud." Robertson-Holley's daughter (and Robertson's niece) Gail Metcalf said in response, "I don't blame people. I think some of the vets who say that are truly trying to protect us. They don’t want us to be scammed and their hearts are in the right place."<ref name="barnard2" />
After the reunion, the ''Toronto Star'' said of the man who claimed to be Robertson, "He is back in Vietnam and has no desire to leave, having fulfilled his one wish: to see his American family once more before he dies." The sister, Robertson-Holley, said it was "not necessary" to conduct DNA testing since she confidently identifies the man as her brother.<ref name="barnard" /> Some groups of Vietnam War veterans and groups that advocate the [[Vietnam War POW/MIA issue]] questioned Robertson's identity.<ref name="barnard2">{{cite news | last=Barnard | first=Linda | url=http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2013/04/30/hot_docs_missing_vietnam_vets_niece_coming_to_unclaimed_world_premiere.html | title=Hot Docs: Missing Vietnam vet's niece coming to Unclaimed world premiere | work=[[Toronto Star]] | date={{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013 }}</ref> The ''Toronto Star'' reported, "The film is already generating heated debate online, along with allegations the man claiming to be Robertson is a fraud." Robertson-Holley's daughter (and Robertson's niece) Gail Metcalf said in response, "I don't blame people. I think some of the vets who say that are truly trying to protect us. They don’t want us to be scammed and their hearts are in the right place."<ref name="barnard2" /> Robertson-Holley subsequently alleviated her adamant stance on DNA testing. Metcalf spoke for her mother, "We plan to do it when we can. We haven't been able to do it yet. In the beginning, mom's position was we don't care if people doubt. We're not spotlight kind of people." Expensive medical bills related to her parents' critical injuries was cited as a reason for delaying DNA testing. The ''Toronto Star'' said in April 2013 pressure would likely increase when the documentary screens at the [[GI Film Festival]] in May 2013. Metcalf said, "Of course we're more than willing. The bottom line is even if the DNA test came back negative, he’s still proven to be an American. My mother will never believe he is not her brother."<ref name="barnard2" />


===Post-release===
Robertson-Holley subsequently alleviated her adamant stance on DNA testing. Metcalf spoke for her mother, "We plan to do it when we can. We haven't been able to do it yet. In the beginning, mom's position was we don't care if people doubt. We're not spotlight kind of people." Expensive medical bills related to her parents' critical injuries was cited as a reason for delaying DNA testing. The ''Toronto Star'' said in April 2013 pressure would likely increase when the documentary screens at the GI Film Festival in May 2013. Metcalf said, "Of course we're more than willing. The bottom line is even if the DNA test came back negative, he’s still proven to be an American. My mother will never believe he is not her brother."<ref name="barnard2" />


On {{nowrap|May 1}}, 2013, a day after the film's premiere, ''[[The Independent]]'' reported that a memo based on a 2009 report from the [[Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office]] said that the man who claimed to be Robertson was actually Dang Tan Ngoc, "a 76-year-old Vietnamese citizen of French origin who has a history of pretending to be US army veterans". The memo said Ngoc came to the attention of the U.S. military in 2006 due to his claim of being Robertson. Ngoc withdrew his claim at the time but he made the claim once again in 2008. He was taken to the U.S. embassy in [[Cambodia]] to be fingerprinted, and his fingerprints did not match Robertson's on record. ''The Independent'' said, "Reports suggest Ngoc could have been impersonating Sgt Robertson since around 1982, with some Vietnam War veterans saying he could have possibly conned veteran groups out of thousands of pounds over the last 30 years." According to the newspaper, in 1991, Paramilitary Operations Officer led an investigative team to Ngoc and was able to retrieve his DNA.<ref>{{cite news | last=Hall | first=John | url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/revealed-man-claiming-to-be-vietnam-veteran-sgt-john-hartley-robertson-who-went-missing-and-was-presumed-dead-44-years-earlier-is-exposed-as-a-fraud-8597350.html | title=Revealed: Man claiming to be Vietnam veteran Sgt John Hartley Robertson who went missing and was presumed dead 44 years earlier is 'exposed as a fraud' | work=[[The Independent]] | date={{nowrap|May 1}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|May 1}}, 2013 }}</ref>
On {{nowrap|May 1}}, 2013, a day after the film's premiere, ''[[The Independent]]'' reported that a memo based on a 2009 report from the [[Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office]] said that the man who claimed to be Robertson was actually Dang Tan Ngoc, "a 76-year-old Vietnamese citizen of French origin who has a history of pretending to be US army veterans". The memo said Ngoc came to the attention of the U.S. military in 2006 due to his claim of being Robertson. Ngoc withdrew his claim at the time but he made the claim once again in 2008. He was taken to the U.S. embassy in [[Cambodia]] to be fingerprinted, and his fingerprints did not match Robertson's on record. ''The Independent'' said, "Reports suggest Ngoc could have been impersonating Sgt Robertson since around 1982, with some Vietnam War veterans saying he could have possibly conned veteran groups out of thousands of pounds over the last 30 years." According to the newspaper, in 1991, Paramilitary Operations Officer [[Billy Waugh]] led an investigative team to Ngoc and was able to retrieve his DNA.<ref name="hall">{{cite news | last=Hall | first=John | url=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/revealed-man-claiming-to-be-vietnam-veteran-sgt-john-hartley-robertson-who-went-missing-and-was-presumed-dead-44-years-earlier-is-exposed-as-a-fraud-8597350.html | title=Revealed: Man claiming to be Vietnam veteran Sgt John Hartley Robertson who went missing and was presumed dead 44 years earlier is 'exposed as a fraud' | work=[[The Independent]] | date={{nowrap|May 1}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|May 1}}, 2013 }}</ref>


==Release==
==Release==


Michael Jorgensen sought for ''Unclaimed'' to screen in his home country of Canada first. The documentary was screened for the first time at an invitation-only patrons' screening at the [[Bloor Cinema]] in [[Toronto]] in early April 2013. It then premiered at the [[Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival]] on {{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013.<ref name="barnard" /> The documentary will also screen at the [[GI Film Festival]] in Washington, DC on {{nowrap|May 12}}, 2013.<ref name="johnson">{{cite news | | last=Johnson | first=Robert | url=http://www.businessinsider.com/johns-robertson-left-in-vietnam-2013-4 | title=New Documentary Says This US Soldier Is Alive In Vietnam 44 Years After Being Left Behind |work =[[Business Insider]] | date={{nowrap|April 26}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 26}}, 2013 }}</ref>
Michael Jorgensen sought for ''Unclaimed'' to screen in his home country of Canada first. The documentary was screened for the first time at an invitation-only patrons' screening at the [[Bloor Cinema]] in [[Toronto]] in early April 2013. It then premiered at the [[Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival]] on {{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013.<ref name="barnard" /> The documentary is also scheduled to screen at the [[GI Film Festival]] in Washington, DC on {{nowrap|May 12}}, 2013.<ref name="johnson">{{cite news | | last=Johnson | first=Robert | url=http://www.businessinsider.com/johns-robertson-left-in-vietnam-2013-4 | title=New Documentary Says This US Soldier Is Alive In Vietnam 44 Years After Being Left Behind |work =[[Business Insider]] | date={{nowrap|April 26}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 26}}, 2013 }}</ref>


James Adams, reviewing for ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'', gave the documentary three out of four stars and described it, "Part mystery, part forensic investigation, part journey to troubled pasts, part redemption song, ''Unclaimed'' is all heart."<ref>{{cite news | last=Adams | first=James | url=http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/film/film-reviews/unclaimed-mystery-of-a-lost-and-found-vietnam-vet/article11498198/ | title=Unclaimed: Mystery of a lost – and found – Vietnam vet | work=[[The Globe and Mail]] | date={{nowrap|April 25}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013 }}</ref> Linda Barnard, who covered ''Unclaimed'' in the ''Toronto Star'',<ref name="barnard" /><ref name="barnard2" /> also reviewed the documentary, "Canadian director Michael Jorgensen’s emotional story... seems unbelievable. To the filmmaker's credit, Jorgensen lets the audience decide whether or not to believe it as he follows Vietnam vet Tom Faunce’s quest to make good on a pledge to leave no man behind."<ref>{{cite news | author=Staff | url=http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2013/04/22/hot_docs_2013_ten_recommended_titles.html | title=23 Hot Docs movies reviewed | work=[[Toronto Star]] | date={{nowrap|April 22}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013 }}</ref>
James Adams, reviewing for ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'', gave the documentary three out of four stars and described it, "Part mystery, part forensic investigation, part journey to troubled pasts, part redemption song, ''Unclaimed'' is all heart."<ref>{{cite news | last=Adams | first=James | url=http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/film/film-reviews/unclaimed-mystery-of-a-lost-and-found-vietnam-vet/article11498198/ | title=Unclaimed: Mystery of a lost – and found – Vietnam vet | work=[[The Globe and Mail]] | date={{nowrap|April 25}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013 }}</ref> Linda Barnard, who covered ''Unclaimed'' in the ''Toronto Star'',<ref name="barnard" /><ref name="barnard2" /> also reviewed the documentary, "Canadian director Michael Jorgensen’s emotional story... seems unbelievable. To the filmmaker's credit, Jorgensen lets the audience decide whether or not to believe it as he follows Vietnam vet Tom Faunce’s quest to make good on a pledge to leave no man behind."<ref>{{cite news | author=Staff | url=http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2013/04/22/hot_docs_2013_ten_recommended_titles.html | title=23 Hot Docs movies reviewed | work=[[Toronto Star]] | date={{nowrap|April 22}}, 2013 | accessdate={{nowrap|April 30}}, 2013 }}</ref>

Revision as of 17:51, 1 May 2013

Unclaimed
The poster shows a blank dog tag on the ground. Below the tag is the film title "Unclaimed".
Theatrical poster
Directed byMichael Jorgensen
Written byMichael Jorgensen
Produced byMichael Jorgensen
CinematographyAllan Leader
Edited byJonathan Mathew
Nick Zacharkiw
Music byMike Shields
Production
company
Myth Merchant Films
Release date
  • April 30, 2013 (2013-04-30) (Hot Docs)
Running time
77 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Unclaimed is a 2013 Canadian documentary film about a man who claims to be former Special Forces Green Beret Master Sgt. John Hartley Robertson, who was declared dead after being shot down over Laos in a 1968 classified mission. The documentary is written, directed, and produced by Michael Jorgensen. It follows Tom Faunce, a veteran of the Vietnam War, in tracking down the man who claimed to be Robertson. Faunce was skeptical of Robertson's identity but eventually became convinced. He convinced Jorgensen to make a documentary about Robertson's story as a way to unite the man with his American family.

Leading up to the film's release, the validity of Robertson's identity was challenged by groups of Vietnam War veterans and groups that advocate the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue. Jean Robertson-Holley, Robertson's surviving sister, was convinced the man was her brother but initially declined DNA testing as unnecessary. Eventually she and her daughter (and Robertson's niece) Gail Metcalf expressed openness to going through with testing. The documentary was screened at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival on April 30, 2013. A day later, The Independent reported the contents of a memo from a 2009 report by the Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office that the man who claimed to be Robertson was actually Dang Tan Ngoc, "a 76-year-old Vietnamese citizen of French origin who has a history of pretending to be US army veterans".[1]

Synopsis

Vietnam veteran Tom Faunce now works as a missionary in Vietnam, where he hears of an elderly man claiming to be Robertson. Faunce's meeting with the man spurs him to try to repatriate him, against the wishes of the U.S. government.[2]

The man claiming to be Robertson states in the film that he was kept in a bamboo cage in the jungle by the North Vietnamese and tortured for a year. Then, confused and badly injured, he was released and married a Vietnamese woman who had helped to care for him, assuming the name of her dead husband. Aged 76 as of 2013, he lives in a remote village in south-central Vietnam and is unable to remember his birthday or his American children’s names, and is now only able to speak Vietnamese. Scenes include a meeting with a veteran who was trained by Robertson back in 1960, and who recognized him on sight.[3]

Production

Unclaimed is written, directed, and produced by Michael Jorgensen. A veteran of the Vietnam War, Tom Faunce, had been on a humanitarian mission in southeast Asia in 2008 when he learned about John Hartley Robertson, a fellow soldier who was reported killed in action in the war, still alive in Vietnam. Faunce was skeptical when meeting Robertson but was eventually convinced of his identity. Faunce then contacted Jorgensen in 2012 to appeal to him to make a documentary as a way to help Robertson reunite with his family. Jorgensen was also skeptical but became convinced to make the documentary about Robertson. The filmmaker said he experienced difficulty with the U.S. military in making the documentary, such as being unable to contact Robertson's family. Jorgensen said a government source told him, "It's not that the Vietnamese won't let him (Robertson) go; it's that our government doesn't want him." When Jorgensen was asked if he believed the man's identity, he replied, "It does not matter what I think. There's no doubt in the family."[3]

Validity of identity

Lead-up to film premiere

With the publicity of Unclaimed, the identity of the man who claimed to be Robertson was challenged. In the documentary, the Toronto Star reported the case made, "There is physical proof of Robertson's birthplace, collected in dramatic fashion onscreen; a tearful meeting in Vietnam with a soldier who was trained by Robertson in 1960 and said he knew him on sight; and a heart-wrenching reunion with his only surviving sister — 80-year-old Jean Robertson-Holly [sic]." Leading up to the film's premiere, Jorgensen said Robertson's American wife and two children had volunteered to participate in DNA testing but withdrew their intent. The filmmaker said, "Somebody suggested to me maybe that's (because) the daughters don't want to know if it's him. It's kind of like, that was an ugly war. It was a long time ago. We just want it to go away... I don't know. What would compel you not to want to know if this person is your biological father?"[3]

The film is already generating heated debate online, along with allegations the man claiming to be Robertson is a fraud.

— Toronto Star[4]

After the reunion, the Toronto Star said of the man who claimed to be Robertson, "He is back in Vietnam and has no desire to leave, having fulfilled his one wish: to see his American family once more before he dies." The sister, Robertson-Holley, said it was "not necessary" to conduct DNA testing since she confidently identifies the man as her brother.[3] Some groups of Vietnam War veterans and groups that advocate the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue questioned Robertson's identity.[4] The Toronto Star reported, "The film is already generating heated debate online, along with allegations the man claiming to be Robertson is a fraud." Robertson-Holley's daughter (and Robertson's niece) Gail Metcalf said in response, "I don't blame people. I think some of the vets who say that are truly trying to protect us. They don’t want us to be scammed and their hearts are in the right place."[4] Robertson-Holley subsequently alleviated her adamant stance on DNA testing. Metcalf spoke for her mother, "We plan to do it when we can. We haven't been able to do it yet. In the beginning, mom's position was we don't care if people doubt. We're not spotlight kind of people." Expensive medical bills related to her parents' critical injuries was cited as a reason for delaying DNA testing. The Toronto Star said in April 2013 pressure would likely increase when the documentary screens at the GI Film Festival in May 2013. Metcalf said, "Of course we're more than willing. The bottom line is even if the DNA test came back negative, he’s still proven to be an American. My mother will never believe he is not her brother."[4]

Post-release

On May 1, 2013, a day after the film's premiere, The Independent reported that a memo based on a 2009 report from the Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office said that the man who claimed to be Robertson was actually Dang Tan Ngoc, "a 76-year-old Vietnamese citizen of French origin who has a history of pretending to be US army veterans". The memo said Ngoc came to the attention of the U.S. military in 2006 due to his claim of being Robertson. Ngoc withdrew his claim at the time but he made the claim once again in 2008. He was taken to the U.S. embassy in Cambodia to be fingerprinted, and his fingerprints did not match Robertson's on record. The Independent said, "Reports suggest Ngoc could have been impersonating Sgt Robertson since around 1982, with some Vietnam War veterans saying he could have possibly conned veteran groups out of thousands of pounds over the last 30 years." According to the newspaper, in 1991, Paramilitary Operations Officer Billy Waugh led an investigative team to Ngoc and was able to retrieve his DNA.[1]

Release

Michael Jorgensen sought for Unclaimed to screen in his home country of Canada first. The documentary was screened for the first time at an invitation-only patrons' screening at the Bloor Cinema in Toronto in early April 2013. It then premiered at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival on April 30, 2013.[3] The documentary is also scheduled to screen at the GI Film Festival in Washington, DC on May 12, 2013.[5]

James Adams, reviewing for The Globe and Mail, gave the documentary three out of four stars and described it, "Part mystery, part forensic investigation, part journey to troubled pasts, part redemption song, Unclaimed is all heart."[6] Linda Barnard, who covered Unclaimed in the Toronto Star,[3][4] also reviewed the documentary, "Canadian director Michael Jorgensen’s emotional story... seems unbelievable. To the filmmaker's credit, Jorgensen lets the audience decide whether or not to believe it as he follows Vietnam vet Tom Faunce’s quest to make good on a pledge to leave no man behind."[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Hall, John (May 1, 2013). "Revealed: Man claiming to be Vietnam veteran Sgt John Hartley Robertson who went missing and was presumed dead 44 years earlier is 'exposed as a fraud'". The Independent. Retrieved May 1, 2013. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  2. ^ Rogalski, Alexander. "Unclaimed". Hot Docs website. Retrieved 26 April 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Barnard, Linda (April 25, 2013). "Hot Docs premiere Unclaimed finds a Vietnam veteran left behind for 44 years". Toronto Star. Retrieved April 25, 2013. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e Barnard, Linda (April 30, 2013). "Hot Docs: Missing Vietnam vet's niece coming to Unclaimed world premiere". Toronto Star. Retrieved April 30, 2013. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  5. ^ Johnson, Robert (April 26, 2013). "New Documentary Says This US Soldier Is Alive In Vietnam 44 Years After Being Left Behind". Business Insider. Retrieved April 26, 2013. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  6. ^ Adams, James (April 25, 2013). "Unclaimed: Mystery of a lost – and found – Vietnam vet". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved April 30, 2013. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  7. ^ Staff (April 22, 2013). "23 Hot Docs movies reviewed". Toronto Star. Retrieved April 30, 2013. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)