Runaway (1984 North Korean film)

Runaway
Title screen
Directed byShin Sang-ok
Based onRunaway
by Chae Seo-hae
Starring
Music byABBA (cover songs of)
Production
company
Release date
  • 1984 (1984) (North Korea)
[1]
Running time
105 minutes[1]
CountryNorth Korea
LanguageKorean
Runaway
Chosŏn'gŭl
탈출기
Revised RomanizationTalchulgi[2]
McCune–ReischauerT'alch'ulgi
IPA[tʰa̠ɭt͡ɕʰuɭɡi]

Runaway (Korean: 탈출기,[3] Korean pronunciation: [tʰa̠ɭt͡ɕʰuɭɡi]) is a 1984 North Korean melodrama film directed by Shin Sang-ok. It was the second film in North Korea by South Korea's Shin after he and his wife Choi Eun-hee had been abducted there. Runaway stars Choe Sang-soo as the protagonist and Choi as his wife.

Runaway is based on a short story of the same name set in the 1920s and written by Chae Seo-hae. The protagonist, Song Ryul has to return the countryside to see his ill father. After his cousin conspires with the Japanese occupiers to sell their crop, Song Ryul is forced to emigrate to Kando (Jiandao) in Manchuria. His family faces numerous adversities there and after a row with a local pharmacist, he is imprisoned. The prison is raided by Kim Il Sung and his guerrillas, who free the inmates, who take revenge on the Japanese by blowing up a railway.

A real train was filled with explosives and exploded for the finale after Shin had jokingly asked for one. Shin considered the scene a pinnacle of his career, and it became a memorable one in the history of North Korean cinema. Shin had to balance his artistic desires with the propaganda goals of North Korea. The result is very much like other North Korean films, but also reminiscent of Shin's previous films he had made to impress the South Korean president Park Chung Hee in the 1960s.

  1. ^ a b c 탈출기 [Runaway]. 북한영화 해설 (in Korean). Information Center on North Korea. Archived from the original on 30 September 2018. Retrieved 10 January 2018.
  2. ^ Kim 2010, p. 39.
  3. ^ Kugŏ ŭi Roma-cha p'yogi charyojip 국어의로마자표기자료집 (in Korean). Seoul: National Academy of the Korean Language. 1996. p. 163. OCLC 742344968.