Hop Film: A Thousand Cuts

Journalist Maria Ressa stands up for the free press, truth and democracy against the authoritarian Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte in this searing documentary.

5/7/2026
7:30 pm - 9:15 pm
Location
Loew Auditorium, Black Family Visual Arts Center
Sponsored by
Hopkins Center for the Arts
Audience
Public
More information
Hopkins Center for the Arts
603 646 2422

Journalist Maria Ressa stands up for the free press, truth and democracy against the authoritarian Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte in this searing documentary.

In 2016, outsider candidate Duterte upset the political establishment in the Philippines by winning the presidency and promising vengeance and violence. Within hours of taking office, bodies piled up in the streets. Rappler, the country's top online news site, founded by Ressa, investigated the murders and revealed a government-sanctioned drug war targeting poor addicts instead of lucrative dealers. In an attempt to suppress independent reporting, Duterte unleashed a powerful disinformation campaign that spread like wildfire throughout social media.

Filmmaker Ramona S. Diaz follows key players from two sides of an increasingly dangerous war between press and government. Representing the journalists is fearless Rappler CEO Ressa, who, despite arrests and harassment, continues to publish articles holding a lawless regime accountable. On the other side, influencers such as popstar-turned-politician Mocha Uson start incendiary social media movements and General Ronald "Bato" Dela Rosa spearheads a public execution campaign against addicts. As each side digs in, we become witness to an epic and ongoing fight for the integrity of human life and truth itself—a conflict that extends beyond the Philippines into our own divisive backyard.

This event is free and unticketed.

Get more info here.

Programmed in advance of Maria Ressa's visit to campus as the keynote speaker at Dartmouth's Social Justice Awards, hosted by Institutional Diversity & Equity.

Location
Loew Auditorium, Black Family Visual Arts Center
Sponsored by
Hopkins Center for the Arts
Audience
Public
More information
Hopkins Center for the Arts
603 646 2422