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Han nyeohaksaengeui ilgi

  • 2006
  • 1h 34min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,2/10
232
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Han nyeohaksaengeui ilgi (2006)
CommediaDramma

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA student experiences different conflicts as she works toward being a scientist.A student experiences different conflicts as she works toward being a scientist.A student experiences different conflicts as she works toward being a scientist.

  • Regia
    • In Hak Jang
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Jun-bo An
  • Star
    • Mi-hyang Pak
    • Jin-mi Kim
    • Cheol Kim
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,2/10
    232
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • In Hak Jang
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jun-bo An
    • Star
      • Mi-hyang Pak
      • Jin-mi Kim
      • Cheol Kim
    • 6Recensioni degli utenti
    • 6Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto1

    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali7

    Modifica
    Mi-hyang Pak
    • Su-ryeon
    Jin-mi Kim
    • Su-ok, her elder sister
    Cheol Kim
    • San-myeong, her father
    Jeong-mi Kim
    Myeong-woon Kim
    Yong Suk Kim
    • Jeong Ran, her Mother
    • (as Yeong-suk Kim)
    Hak-myeong Shin
    • Regia
      • In Hak Jang
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jun-bo An
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti6

    5,2232
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7angiejudithgm

    The life of a North Korean teenager

    The film depicts a North Korean teenager's struggle to understand her father's devotion to his country, and to scientific achievement at the expense of his own family's happiness.

    Spending most of his time at work in a distant town, he leaves his two daughters, wife, and mother-in-law in their rural home.

    This girl biggest dream is to live in an apartment, and we frequently see her dreaming about escaping her reality, a hard life in the middle of a low income family.

    Not a great movie, but coming from North Korea it's not that bad actually.

    very good to understand a little more about the daily lives of North Koreans.
    5Leofwine_draca

    Unassuming propaganda piece

    While some of the North Korean movies I've watched have turned out greater than the sum of their parts, THE SCHOOLGIRL'S DIARY turns out to be nothing more than a thinly-veiled propaganda piece in which the whole story is an allegory providing a moral lesson for the masses. The essential essence of the plot involves an unhappy schoolgirl, made sad by the continuing absence of her professor father whose lack of presence leads to many problems in the family home.

    You can guess from the outset that there's going to be a happy ending with this one and indeed the story plays out as completely predictably as you'd expect. The calibre of the film-making is very ordinary and hardly on par with genuinely beautiful North Korean movies like A BROAD BELLFLOWER, although the leading performances from the teenage actresses are pretty decent. There's some comedy in here, alongside some songs to lift the spirits, and as usual the film as a whole provides a valuable insight into life in North Korea.
    5joinee_cleary

    More 'exploring' than reviewing

    For a nation with such hatred towards "Imperialist America", the opening shot of A Schoolgirl's Diary is particularly vivid. You see a young girl walking away from school with a Mickey Mouse backpack. This decision confused me, so reply if you have any idea what the meaning of it is. Now, to unemotionally explain the premise, the story is of a girl called Soo- Ryun who is ashamed of her father because he hasn't obtained a doctorate, but she is unaware of the hard work he does. An obsession with qualifications and being the best is very prominent, which is seen in Soo-OK - Soo-Ryun's sister - whose aim is to join the women's national football team. She is so keen on this that whenever she is on screen, we are made to think about football, for example when she's in bed doing headers with a balloon.

    In a similar-but-not-really way to Vertigo, you get a constant repetition of certain colours in shots. In Vertigo it is rather vividly red and green, and it's infuriating the first time you watch it. With The Schoolgirl's Diary it is the colours of the North Korean flag: Red, white and slightly dark blue. Looking at the frequency at which you see these colours together in clothing and props, it is definitely no coincidence. This brings me to something it has in common with The Flower Girl (1972, also DPRK): it seems to be constructing an audience of people who have never or almost never seen a movie before. However, there is no point in introducing propaganda in subtle(ish) ways like colour palette or elisions to the Juche Idea, as the expected belief of North Korean citizens is mentioned explicitly, through joyous songs about the 'Dear General'. Other more subtle ideology includes representing the leader as a father figure and as a protective umbrella, for accidental humour.

    There are a few things to learn from this film about the country's culture, though some of it seems unlikely. In particular I'm thinking of Soo-Ryun's desire to live in a small apartment rather than the lovely detached house they already live in. This seems an odd preference. Are the filmmakers just trying tell their audience that this is what they should like? It was great to hear some references that cross borders. The football lover Soo-OK is described by her uncle as a "female Pele". Esope's Fables is also quoted. A hilarious representation that any culture will recognise is the representation of Soo-Ryun the stock character, 'moody teenager' alongside the school's bitch. Both are hilarious versions of this very familiar representation. Said bitch's malice is directed at Soo-Ryun because of the whole doctorate thing. Something that surprised me was, out of nowhere, Soo-Ryun slapping Soo-OK for being rude to their mother. Perhaps this is more culturally normal, like it is in Bollywood. An unusual view of science is taken and I'm not sure if this reflects how people really feel or if it is just being pushed in this film. The dad thinks that the purpose of science should be to improve a nation and improve its people's lives, therefore there are some areas of science are pointless. No interest in the pursuit of knowledge is given. One more cultural thing I must know more about: what is this fixation North Korea has with piano accordions?

    I noticed a few technical flaws that really spoil the smoothness of certain scenes. As it has a fairly classical, traditional score, it would benefit from 'sneaking'** some of the music in, rather than having a violin obtrusively enter a pivotal conversation. The music that BLARES out after the line "Mum has cancer" is also quite irritating. In places the voices have very obviously been recorded in a studio and seem detached from the actor. Often the juxtaposition of shots just doesn't work. The scene where the plug socket bursts into flames is a good example and has that low-angle shot that doesn't fit in anywhere. A broader point covering the whole narrative is that there is not a good sense of changing pace or intensity. It's difficult to know how this could be improved but the nature of the story makes narrative excitement pretty difficult. There is some attempt at narrative cohesion, with a good but unmemorable main theme that plays clearly in the opening scene and at the end to make their ugly apartment block look more aspirational. There is clever non-linear, circular bit of narrative involving a paper aeroplane. In any case, The Flower Girl is a much more polished and professional film.

    There are some real gems of quotes in A Schoolgirl's Diary, some of which are amusing and some which are angering. It can be said of many countries that there is only an illusion of choice, summed up in this quote: "A bird can fly because it has wings. A train can move forward because it has rails." It is great to see some real humour, through banter and slapstick, and a football match between scientists and factory workers. Soo-OK joins in and scores of course. The line to end all lines though, is upon erecting a chimney: "Long live thermodynamics!"
    3Uriah43

    A Potentially Good Film Ruined by Shameless Propaganda

    This film essentially involves a young girl by the name of "Soo-ryeon" (Mi-hyang Pak) who lives in a small village somewhere in rural North Korea. Although many of her schoolmates reside in an apartment building, she lives a little further in the country with her mother "Jeong Ran" (Yong Suk Kim) and her sister "Su-ok" (Jin-mi Kim) in her grandmother's house due in large part because her father San-myeong, (Cheol Kim) works at a factory many miles away and hardly ever comes home. As a result, Soo-ryeon feels that her father has abandoned them and becomes quite bitter about it. To that end, although San-myeong later admits to her that he hasn't been a good husband or father, he justifies his obsession with his work on the grounds that patriotism to the state and loyalty to the "Dear Leader" (Kim Jong-il) is much more important. Her mother agrees. Now rather than reveal any more and risk ruining the movie for those who haven't seen it, I will just say that I didn't particularly care for this film due in large part to the excessive propaganda which not only distorted the reality of life in that country but also permeated the entire plot. The ending was especially ludicrous. That being said, if the story had been allowed to take a more normal course, I may have been more impressed as it honestly had some potential. However, since this film was nothing more than an obvious effort to prop up a corrupt regime, I have rated it accordingly. Below average.

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      After it showing at the Pyongyang Film Festival, a French company bought the rights making it the first North Korean film to secure a distribution deal in over a decade.

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 26 dicembre 2007 (Francia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Corea del Nord
    • Lingua
      • Coreano
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Schoolgirl's Diary
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Mansudae Art Studio
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 15.770 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 34min(94 min)
    • Colore
      • Color

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