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Watching Movies I had already made sufficient mental preparations before, but I didn't expect Kim Ki-duk's three views of the new film to be so normal. I didn't expect it! I didn't expect it!
Aside from the label of Kim Ki-duk, the movie "The Net" can be regarded as a good drama, but I prefer its other translation, "The Man Who Can't Get Out of the North".
The relationship between the DPRK and the ROK is a subject that is often used in Korean films. The more classic ones are "Common Security Zone", "Berlin", "Secret and Great", etc. Most of the films that generally involve such topics are Can't skip the drama of espionage. Then there are the gunfights, car chases, and explosions that are on par with Hollywood. It's cool or cool. However, the ending of the film is nothing more than a few types, the South Korean side wins, the North Korean side loses; the South Korean side wins, the North Korean agent defected and surrendered. The winner is always Korea.
This may also be South Korea's export of film culture to influence the world's perception of inter-Korean relations. This film shows us a more real and indifferent relationship between the DPRK and the ROK through a civilian perspective.
A North Korean fisherman (played by Yoo Seung-bum) who lives on the border of North Korea and South Korea, the fishing boat that broke down unexpectedly entered South Korea, but a mechanical accident became an accident that changed his fate.
Most of the footage in the film is concentrated in the interrogation room. Torture, hatred, and condescension may represent the attitude of some Koreans towards North Korean defectors, while the help, belief, and persuasion of the fisherman's personal guards should also represent another part of the attitude. .
Either way, the reason why the fisherman is firm is only because of his family. That's why he couldn't get out of the North.
The film does not blindly glorify South Korea's national conditions and system. There are still some festering scars behind the glamorous freedom and democracy, and there are still many people who are struggling to make a living for money.
The fisherman eventually returned to North Korea with the fishing boat he had repaired, but he just jumped from one interrogation room to another, thus becoming a state of being inhuman inside and out. The same attitude of interrogation, only the fisherman is tormented. Ironically, all the superficial propaganda is no different from South Korea, using a Nikon camera.
Everything the fisherman has experienced in the two countries is inextricably intertwined and intertwined, and an invisible net stretches across the border between the DPRK and the ROK.
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