Repatriation


2h 29m 2004

Brief Synopsis

Explores the agonizing psychological and physical survival of long-term "unconverted" North Korean political prisoners in detention in South Korea and their quest to return home. The filmmaker first became acquainted with two unconverted prisoners in 1992. Both men, imprisoned for spying in the Sout

Film Details

Also Known As
Song-Whan, Songhwan
Genre
Documentary
Foreign
Release Date
2004

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 29m

Synopsis

Explores the agonizing psychological and physical survival of long-term "unconverted" North Korean political prisoners in detention in South Korea and their quest to return home. The filmmaker first became acquainted with two unconverted prisoners in 1992. Both men, imprisoned for spying in the South, refused to denounce their communist beliefs and served out their full 30-year terms. Drawn to their stories and them personally, Dong-won subsequently filmed them for more than a decade. By the end of the 1990s, relations between North and South Korea significantly improved, and even the most hardened unconverted cases were released. How did these men survive the dehumanizing conversion process of systematic torture for more than 40 years? What awaited them in the outside world? And what was their final destiny? Ultimately a story about the indomitable human spirit, Repatriation is an extraordinary chronicle of human drama in the context of political change, and a testament to those who stubbornly, and at tremendous cost, fight for what they believe in.

Film Details

Also Known As
Song-Whan, Songhwan
Genre
Documentary
Foreign
Release Date
2004

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 29m

Quotes

Trivia

Miscellaneous Notes

Winner of Freedom of Expression Award at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival.

Released in United States January 2004

Shown at Sundance Film Festival (World Cinema/Documentary) January 15-25, 2004.

Released in United States January 2004 (Shown at Sundance Film Festival (World Cinema/Documentary) January 15-25, 2004.)