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DOXA 2009: Yodok Stories trailer

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Uploaded by on Apr 26, 2009

Director: Andrzej Fidyk
Norway, 2008, 82 minutes

In North Korea, the human capacity for cruelty has entered bizarre new territory. The Yodok concentration camp houses more than 200,000 men, women and children, who are considered class enemies by the state. Entire families are sent to the camp, if even one member is suspected of seditious activity or thought. George Orwell, at his bleakest, could not have conceived of state-mandated horror on such a gargantuan scale. Director Andrzej Fidyk first came to familiarity with the nature of North Korea while making the documentary The Parade (1988). It followed a massive celebration for Kim Jong-il featuring 50,000 children performing in perfect regimented harmony. Fidyk was struck by the scale of this propaganda and by the professionalism of its presentation. He wanted to document what was happening inside this country that has been sealed off from the world for decades.

Together with Jung Sung San, a defector trained in North Korean theatrical style, Fidyk creates a large-scale musical based on the stories of seven people. The musical includes both prisoners and guards from Yodok and the result of their collaboration begs description. Those who suffered torture and who lost their families matter-of-factly relate details of life in the camp. During the plays production, they advise on everything from marching formations to the most efficient means of performing mass executions. The adage that truth is always stranger than fiction doesnt quite do the story justice.

The larger political implications are made clear in the films final coda. With more than 22 million people slowly starving to death, strangers snatching women and children off the street and eating them is not uncommon. But despite the talk about a united country, South Korea, a modern and affluent nation, doesnt have much interest in helping its northern neighbours: people who have never seen a bank machine or used a credit card. With little more than rhetoric about reunification, the only action South Korean people can take is to float balloons across the border, filled with pamphlets and plastic bags. An utter revelation, Yodok Stories must be seen to be believed, but even that proves insufficient in the face of the unimaginable reality of life inside North Korea.

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All Comments (8)

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  • Please, does anyone know where I can see this with english subtitles? The only one can find on YT isnt subtitled.

  • I saw this movie with my class too, i cried, it's horrible!

  • hehe, agreed.

  • why do they always use those dramatic voices in trailers!!! ruined the whole trailer... but im still seeing the movie

  • Well, the scary deep god-voice dosen't really fit in..

  • I have seen this movie with my class, its very sad and so real! I love this movie

  • Gdzie można kupić płytę z tym filmem? Szukam juz kilka miesięcy i nic :(

  • This looks very interesting! Can I also see it somewhere in the Netherlands?

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