Yodok Stories

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Sinopsis(1)

After Andrzej Fidyk had filmed a stadium parade in North Korea in the late 1980s to the greater honour and glory of then leader Kim Il Sung, the filmmaker remained fascinated with the country that has cut off its inhabitants from the outside world for so many decades. "A country with a totalitarian system that exists in its purest form," Fidyk says in the voice-over. At least 200,000 men, women and children live in concentration camps as state enemies. Fidyk decided to make a film about these camps, but realised that the chance he could actually film there was nil. He found the solution in the South Korean capital of Seoul, where he met a group of escaped prisoners. They collaborated with Jung Sung San, a stage director who fled North Korea in 1994, in making a controversial musical about the refugees' experiences in Yodok, better known as Camp 15. Fidyk follows the rehearsals and talks with victims, but also former camp guards, about their time in North Korea. Images of the camp prove to be unnecessary; camp terminology like "public executions" and "forced abortion" is sufficient. The voice-over soberly provides information on life in North Korea and the concentration camps. (International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam)

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