- Unfinished Business
Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
Instructions
Oh no! Notifications on this device is turn off for 123Movies!
If you want to get notifications from 123Movies about new qualities and episodes follow the instructions below.
How to turn on notifications?
On Chrome:
-
Step 1: Click on the lock screen next to website address Help Image
-
Step 2: Notification permissions for the website are displayed, along with possible selections. Help Image
-
Step 3: Select Allow from Notifications permission to enable Push. Help Image
On Firefox:
-
Step 1: Click on the lock screen next to website address Help Image
-
Step 2: Notification permissions for the website are displayed, along with possible selections. Help Image
-
Step 3: Select Allow from Notifications permission to enable Push. Help Image
On Chrome for Android:
-
Step 1: Click on the lock screen next to website address Help Image
-
Step 2: Notification permissions for the website are displayed, along with possible selections. Help Image
We are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our servers. We hope to have this resolved soon. This issue doesn't affect premium users.
Get Premium
Watch on MixDrop/MyStream
All our servers are currently overloaded. Please try again later or get our Premium Subscription
Refresh Page
GET PREMIUM
Oops...
Something went wrong
Try again later.
Something went wrong
Try again later.
Here You can choose a playback server.
Unfinished Business
Description
Spring, 1942: F.D.R. signs executive order 9066, and more than 110,000 Japanese Americans, most of them U.S. citizens, are sent to internment camps. Three young men - Min Yasui, an attorney from Oregon, Gordon Hirabayashi, a Quaker college student in Washington, and Fred Korematsu, a Bay Area welder - serve jail sentences for violating laws against Japanese Americans; the U.S. Supreme Court upholds their convictions. Forty years later, the three file suits to have their sentences overturned. This documentary tells their stories and helps break 40 years of silence and shame. By the end of the documentary, the court proceedings remain unfinished.
Spring, 1942: F.D.R. signs executive order 9066, and more than 110,000 Japanese Americans, most of them U.S. citizens, are sent to internment camps. Three young men - Min Yasui, an attorney from Oregon, Gordon Hirabayashi, a Quaker college student in Washington, and Fred Korematsu, a Bay Area welder - serve jail sentences for violating laws against Japanese Americans; the U.S. Supreme Court upholds their convictions. Forty years later, the three file suits to have their sentences overturned. This documentary tells their stories and helps break 40 years of silence and shame. By the end of the documentary, the court proceedings remain unfinished.
COMMENTS (0)
Sort by
Newest
Newest
Oldest

