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Beyond Utopia

  • 2023
  • PG-13
  • 1 Std. 55 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,9/10
4737
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Beyond Utopia (2023)
Fathom Events Trailer
trailer wiedergeben0:31
1 Video
11 Fotos
Krimi-DokumentarfilmNachrichtenPolitischer DokumentarfilmBiographieDokumentarfilmGeschichte

Die Geschichte mehrerer Familien, die versuchen, der Unterdrückung in Nordkorea zu entkommen, zeigt eine Welt, die die meisten von uns nie gesehen haben.Die Geschichte mehrerer Familien, die versuchen, der Unterdrückung in Nordkorea zu entkommen, zeigt eine Welt, die die meisten von uns nie gesehen haben.Die Geschichte mehrerer Familien, die versuchen, der Unterdrückung in Nordkorea zu entkommen, zeigt eine Welt, die die meisten von uns nie gesehen haben.

  • Regie
    • Madeleine Gavin
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Hyeonseo Lee
    • Sung-eun Kim
    • So-yeon Lee
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,9/10
    4737
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Madeleine Gavin
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Hyeonseo Lee
      • Sung-eun Kim
      • So-yeon Lee
    • 26Benutzerrezensionen
    • 49Kritische Rezensionen
    • 85Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Primetime Emmy nominiert
      • 7 Gewinne & 48 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Beyond Utopia
    Trailer 0:31
    Beyond Utopia

    Fotos11

    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung18

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    Hyeonseo Lee
    • self, author of 'The Girl with Seven Names'
    Sung-eun Kim
    • self, founder and president of Caleb Mission
    So-yeon Lee
    • Self
    Sue Mi Terry
    Sue Mi Terry
    • Self
    Barbara Demick
    • self, author of 'Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea'
    Jung Gwang-Il
    • Self
    Jean H. Lee
    Jean H. Lee
    • Self, journalist
    • (as Jean Lee)
    Sokeel Park
    • self, Liberty in North Korea
    Sunok Park
    • Self
    Jinhae Roh
    • Self
    Jinpyeong Roh
    • Self
    Yonggil Roh
    • Self
    Yeongbok Woo
    • Self
    Esther Park
    • self, Seungeun Kim's wife
    Hyukchang Wu
    • Self
    Yeonghee Woo
    • Self
    Cheongmi Woo
    • Self
    Cheong
    • self, Soyeon Lee's son
    • (Synchronisation)
    • Regie
      • Madeleine Gavin
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen26

    7,94.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10marcusryle

    The most important movie you can see

    It is easy to think we are already aware that North Korea is "bad", and that its citizens are "oppressed". But can we really imagine what this means every day for the human beings living there? The importance of this film can be overstated. It transcends being "just" a film and becomes a cry for help that all of the free world must heed. Many people literally risked their lives for these stories to be told, and the least we can do to honor them is to hear their stories first hand.

    Nazi comparisons today are often thrown around carelessly, however, what is happening in North Korea is truly worthy of the comparison without a hint of hyperbole. But there are some amazing individuals doing their part to make a difference, and it is inspiring to learn more about them in this film.

    As of this writing, there is no US distribution for "Beyond Utopia". It seems no one (yet) has the backbone to release this to all Americans. It's likely that echoes of what happened to Sony Pictures with the release of "The Interview" still lingers for some executives. But that risk is so superficial compared to what North Korean citizens are facing every minute. The actions of North Korea deserve to be uncloaked, and this film is a giant step in that direction.
    8cutie7

    Ever so important testament to human strength

    My favorite movies are the ones that shatter my heart into a million pieces, and this documentary shook me to the core. "Beyond Utopia" is a powerful testament to human strength, skillfully crafted through brave filmmaking that takes us deep into the lives of families striving to escape North Korean oppression. The film's eye-opening portrayal of their journey exposes a world hidden from most of us, serving as a poignant reminder of the lengths people will go to for freedom. In today's world, where social cinema holds immense importance, this documentary stands as a prime example of its significance. However, be prepared for a very tough watch as it showcases the unfiltered reality these families endure.
    9maxastree

    Exceptional documentary

    This film is outstanding.

    One of the things about North Korean coverage in general is the tendency for major news brands to craft a somewhat sanitized story about the personality cult of Kim Jong-Un (a fat, spoilt dictator) and his powerful sister (creepy, bloodless, etc).

    The issue here is that it evades the real issue with North Korea, namely the suffering public that have endured famine followed further food shortages, public executions and lived in undeveloped squalor amid the sham of fascist indoctrination and state powers that prolong the poverty and repressive nature of the place but require utmost respect from the citizenry.

    Throughout the film, without spoiling details, we see the complexities, danger and, at times, heroism of real people escaping the ruins of the Kim dynasty, including rarely seen footage of the state that, not surprisingly, is kept from public view.

    The family in much of the narrative leaves in unison, meaning that young children and grandparents also must cross rivers, mountainous terrain and deal with possibly deceptive fixers (or "brokers") that can arrange the network of vans and safe-houses allowing North Koreans to travel thousands of kilometers across Asia to find land where they can be classified as defectors.

    At the viewing I attended, audiences were obviously moved by the repressiveness and deprivation of North Korean lives and the relatable humanity of it's victims.

    In this particular feature documentary, a South Korean pastor who'd long ago left the North is able to assist with their travels. Having lost a family member in an earlier personal tragedy, Pastor Sengeun Kim risks life and limb helping other family members to improve their lives.

    It's not well understood (or perhaps believed) how repressive the North's rules are - defectors risk being shot or may receive severe physical beatings, at worst they may die in the nation's gulag system. Others leave only to be sold into sex trafficking or other exploitative schemes. Some defectors wish to get family members out but are unable to, as the information ban and threat level from the state severely complicates freedom of movement and basic human rights.

    Something lasting about seeing this item is that it's human qualities are moving, and authentic. As mentioned, much of the "coverage" we receive of North Korea is factual but also fabricated from motion graphics, recycled news footage, alternately tourists are sometimes allowed by rail from China for brief stage-managed visits of the brighter buildings of Pyongyang where visitors are led to well-maintained memorial statues of their permanent head of state and his offspring. Beyond Utopia actually examines the predicament of lives being lived in North Korea.
    10movie-reviews-uk

    Sad, uplifting and hard to ignore

    Ever since seeing "Beyond Utopia" I've been thinking about what makes a top-class documentary. It doesn't need to be entertaining, since that's the job of fiction, but it must be compelling and almost more than real. Maybe that's the trick? To show you an aspect of the world that you'd dismiss as unbelievable if you didn't know it to be true.

    That's exactly what you get here. I knew, vaguely, that North Korea was this bizarre puppet state founded by Kim Il Sung and propped up by Russia. I also knew that his dynasty inculcated an almost religious aura around themselves as the father, mother and spirit of the country.

    What I didn't know, or consider, was just how these so-called leaders managed to persist in the face of economic collapse, famine and prosperity elsewhere. What they've managed to combine is nationwide brain-washing and a totalitarian state of control that would make Stalin proud.

    And yet that still doesn't get to the heart of the darkness. To control the population everyone is spying on everyone else. If you step out of line then you're sent to a reeducation camp. If you really step out of line (by trying to flee the country perhaps) then you wind up in the gulag and no one comes back from the gulag. But before then you'll be beaten, tortured and crushed with your family being forcibly relocated to another part of the country.

    Despite this the poor North Korean people in "Beyond Utopia" still love their nation and why shouldn't they. It's where they belong and where their culture resides. The problem is that the communist state forces them to leave and to leave everything behind. It's just horrific on all counts.

    The film pulls absolutely no punches in following the perilous journey undertaken by the refugees being tracked. There really isn't much of a happy ending for anyone when you dig into the meat of the story and there aren't any winners. Just victims of a murderous regime. That said it's a must watch if you want to be educated.
    8brentsbulletinboard

    Revelatory and Hopeful Yet Disturbing

    In today's world, it's almost unfathomable that there are places that exist on this planet that operate on the principles of unbridled cruelty, deliberate deception and mass brainwashing, with even the slightest of infractions capable of leading to banishment to remote gulags, brutal beatings and even savage public executions. However, such are the conditions of everyday life in North Korea, a paranoid, ruthless regime that doesn't hesitate to inflict such indignities on its population and deprive residents of knowledge of anything beyond its borders. In a United Nations human rights report, the unthinkable tactics employed here have been described as being on par with those that were used in Nazi Germany. So it's no wonder there are many who want to escape this harsh reality - that is, at least among those who are able to see beyond the artifice of the false utopian picture that officials have painted of their sorrowful nation. Getting out is far from easy, however, a harrowing venture that often requires defectors to flee northward to China and then maneuver through the challenging terrain of several neighboring Asian countries rather than simply crossing into nearby democratic South Korea, a sanctuary walled off by a de facto combat zone boobytrapped with countless land mines. Seeing what refugees must endure is the aim of documentarian Madeleine Gavin's latest offering, a compilation of defector stories, including those who have succeeded in escaping and those attempting to do so. The latter are compellingly filmed with firsthand, on-the-ground footage, with no reenactments, showing in detail the ordeals they must go through to make their flights to freedom, sometimes successful, sometimes not. In the process, the film also provides audiences with a concise yet comprehensive history of how North Korea reached this point while revealing some little-known troubling secrets about everyday life in this mysterious land, many of which most outsiders have probably never heard of, let alone seen. Because of this, some of the picture's imagery may be considered quite disturbing, especially for sensitive viewers, so those who are easily upset by such troubling visuals should take note. Nevertheless, this BAFTA Award-nominated release is an important piece of filmmaking that those outside this inscrutable enclave should know about - and hope that the world can help to overcome.

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      self, author of 'The Girl with Seven Names': I'm thinking, if I'm a bird, I can fly anywhere I want. What if I'm flying to North Korea seeing everyone there? And I was thinking, what if you see your friend is dying for starvation or sickness? You are one little bird. So is it happy for you to see that reality, or is it just better if you don't know, you don't see that. Which one makes you happy?

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in 2024 EE BAFTA Film Awards (2024)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 27. Oktober 2023 (Vereinigtes Königreich)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Vereinigte Staaten
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Koreanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Flykten från Nordkorea
    • Drehorte
      • Seoul, Südkorea(location)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • 19340 Productions
      • Human Rights Foundation
      • Random Good Foundation
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    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 11.716 $
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 110.196 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 55 Min.(115 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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