Alphabetical           State by State
 Arts & Entertainment Add/Modify your site link! Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 Arts and Entertainment
 American Literature
 Amusement and Theme Parks
 Art Galleries
 Art History
 Artists
 Arts & Entertainment News
 Arts & Letters
 Bonsai and Suiseki
 Canadian Literature
 Categories
 Category
 Celebrities
 Classical Studies
 Comedy
 Comics and Animation
 Contests, Surveys, and Polls
 Cool Links
 Crafts
 Criticism and Theory
 Cultural
 Cultures and Groups
 Design
 Design Arts
 Digital
 Drama Theater Groups
 Education
 Education - Art
 Employment
 English Literature
 Events
 Food & Recipes
 Graphic Design
 Humor
 Information Media
 Kid's Museums
 Literature
 Magazines
 Magic
 Movies & Films
 Museums on the Net
 Museums, Galleries, and Centers
 Musical Theater Groups
 Musicals
 Organizations
 Performing Arts
 Publications
 Publishers Resources
 Reviews
 Science Museums & Exhibits
 Television
 Tribal
 Video
 Virtual Cards
 Visual Arts
 Web Games
 Writers Resources
Copyright © 1998-01 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
New Film to Center on Memoir of Life in North Korean Gulag  
Thursday, May 8, 2008 9:06 AM

A memoir of life in a North Korean gulag is to become the latest South Korean film project aiming a...


A memoir of life in a North Korean gulag is to become the latest South Korean film project aiming a spotlight at the North's human rights situation.  As VOA Seoul Correspondent Kurt Achin reports, the book has already won over some very influential readers in Washington.

Kang Cheol Hwan speaks during press event in Washington, D.C. (July 2005 file photo)
Kang Cheol Hwan speaks during press event in Washington, D.C. (July 2005 file photo)
 The Aquariums of Pyongyang, by North Korean escapee Kang Cheol Hwan, gained fame as one of U.S. President George W. Bush's favorite books.  Mr. Bush is reported to have handed out copies of the book to staff and friends and invited Kang to the White House, three years ago, for a lengthy one-on-one chat.

Now, the story of Kang's childhood in a North Korean punitive labor camp is scheduled to become a motion picture. 

Kang says he was a victim of what human rights advocates describe as North Korea's policy of "collective punishment."  He and his family were sent to the North's infamous Yoduk labor camp in 1977, because of a suspected political offense by his grandfather.

Kang's book describes the horrors he witnessed at Yoduk, including starvation, severe beatings and disease.  He says it is long overdue for his story to be told on the big screen.

Kang says, despite the fact the Yoduk concentration camp has been operating for 50 years, there have been no films depicting it or any of North Korea's human rights abuses.  He compares the situation to Hitler's concentration camps, about which many films have been produced.

North Korea denies engaging in any abuse of human rights, despite the passage of several United Nations resolutions criticizing the treatment of its citizens.  For years, Pyongyang has refused to allow a U.N.-appointed human rights researcher any access to the country.   North Korea describes Kang Cheol-hwan as "human scum."

Lee Myung-bak (file photo)
Lee Myung-bak (File)
For 10 years before the February inauguration of conservative President Lee Myung-bak, South Korean administrations kept a near-total public silence on North Korean human rights issues.  Their aim was to peacefully engage the North and to avoid embarrassing the leadership there.

President Lee has changed that political climate by issuing numerous public calls for North Korea to improve its human rights practices.  At least two other major film projects have emerged this year, drawing attention to the North's human rights situation.

Kang Cheol-hwan says film is a powerful tool in shining a light on Pyongyang's abuses.

He says showing the North's gulags, on screen, to world audiences it the best way to honor those who have died in them.  He says he hopes his film will help to end the camps once and for all.

The Aquariums of Pyongyang is being produced by South Korea's Cinema And I.  Producers say shooting is expected to begin in October, in time for a release around July of next year.  The filmmakers are negotiating with American and European distributors for a worldwide release.

Arts & Entertainment News

  • Arts & Entertainment Home

  • Iconic Washington Restaurant Celebrates 50th Anniversary  

  • Series of May Tributes Honor Late Frank Sinatra  

  • Young Rapper in Malabo Fights Government   

  • Jackson, Reagan Added to National Recording Registry  

  • Fine Arts Magnet School Challenges Young Talent  

  • Cannes Film Festival Opens with Brazilian Drama

  • 'The Visitor' Explores Cultural Barriers, Friendship Between Grief-Stricken Professor, Foreigners Who Inhabit His Home  

  • Jimmy Carter Discusses Controversial Mideast Trip, US Presidential Race With  

  • Influential American Artist Robert Rauschenberg Dead at 82

  • Sakharov Museum Director Charged with Inciting Hatred

  • Mariah Carey Confirms Marriage News; Madonna's 'Hard Candy' Debuts at Number 1

  • Documentary 'SS United States' Tells Tale of Iconic Ocean Liner

  • Argentinean Artist Prepares for Show in Washington  

  • James Otto Displays Range of Emotions on 'Sunset Man'  

  • Bush Daughter Marries at Private Texas Ceremony

  • Nigerian Film Industry Thrives

  • Color and Imagination Drive 'Speed Racer' Onto Big Screen  

  • Zimbabwe Union Officials Seek High Court Release; Editor, Lawyer Freed  

  • New Fiction Creates Stir in Northern Nigeria  

  • Award-Winning Journalist Praises Congressional Resolution Honoring Dith Pran

  • Zimbabwean Newspaper Editor Arrested For 'Publishing Falsehoods'  

  • Where in the World is Osama Bin Laden  

  • "The Visitor" Focuses on Life of Illegal Immigrants in US  

  • Country Singer Eddy Arnold Dies at 89

  • New Lucky Dube Compilation

  • New Film to Center on Memoir of Life in North Korean Gulag  

  • Reality TV Show Contestant Pursues Dream in Restaurant Business

  • Chinese Musicians Perform for Pope in Landmark Concert  

  • Poachers Threaten One-Horned Rhino  

  • Dreaded Relationship Break-Up Scenario Serves as Fodder for Comedy in 'Forgetting Sarah Marshall'