Screening | Film/Video

A Missing Can of Film (Naeem Mohaiemen, 2025)

A storied “missing can of film” that could change the understanding of the Bangladesh Liberation War raises questions of how history is ultimately told.

Free for all audiences with ticket

A close up of a horse with overlaid text stating "But surely it exists".
Date
Mar 24, 2026
Cost
Free
Time
5 p.m. - 5:50 p.m. ET
Location
Wexner Center for the Arts

Film/Video Theater

Zahir Raihan was a Bangladeshi writer and filmmaker, best known for his documentary film Stop Genocide (1971), made during the Bangladesh Liberation War and released after his death. Raihan disappeared at the age of 36 shortly after the war’s end. Rumors circulated that there was a missing can of film that contained footage that would have been embarrassing to leaders of the new country. Mohaiemen’s A Missing Can of Film intersperses footage from Raihan’s body of work with contemporary footage shot in the aftermath of the 2024 student uprising in Bangladesh, questioning the carriers—film canisters, dusty equipment—of disputed history. (44 mins., DCP)

Screened in conjunction with the exhibition Naeem Mohaiemen: Corinthians, on view through May 24.