Myself in the Distant Future
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Director In Hak Jang Cinematography Sung Chan Kang Writer Ung Yong Yui Language Korean | 4/10 IMDb Screenplay Ung Yong Yui Duration Country North Korea | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Release date 1997 (1997) Cast Hye Gyong Kim, Myong Mun Kim People also search for The Schoolgirls Diary, The Other Side of the Mountain, Wish |
Myself in the Distant Future is a 1997 North Korean film directed by Jang In-hak.
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Summary
A young man falls in love with the leader of a shock brigade of plasterers who are working to modernize their home village. He attempts to win her heart and take her back to Pyongyang by becoming a model worker, but she chooses to continue her plastering.
The film's central theme is that a person should be happy and content in the place of their birth, regardless of conditions, and supports the willingness of the North Korean government to restrict migration from the countryside into the cities. Another theme is for people to "eat potatoes, not rice", which reinforces an official government campaign encouraging the consumption of potatoes. Despite being filmed during the North Korean famine, Myself in the Distant Future depicts a country blessed with a plentiful supply of food.
Festival screenings
Myself in the Distant Future was screened at the 6th Pyongyang International Film Festival in 1998, where it was awarded both the Golden Torch and Acting prizes. In 2000, it was one of eight North Korean films played at the Udine Festival of Far East Film, where it was regarded by Richard James Havis of Asiaweek as being "one of the more obvious propaganda movies".
References
Myself in the Distant Future WikipediaMyself in the Distant Future IMDb