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Trish's Reviews > A Kim Jong-Il Production: The Extraordinary True Story of a Kidnapped Filmmaker, His Star Actress, and a Young Dictator's Rise to Power

A Kim Jong-Il Production by Paul   Fischer
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it was amazing
bookshelves: asia, audio, foreign-affairs, history, crime, film

This work of creative nonfiction will undoubtedly catch many Asia-watchers by surprise. Facts about North Korea are thin on the ground here in America, but this book blasts open a personal history of Kim Jong-Il with a canny, graceful, and wise commentary that seems far beyond what anyone else has been able to manage. It is an enormous feat of research, but more than that, it is so completely and compulsively readable that we are held captive.

It begins detailing the history of two individuals who were instrumental in the South Korean film industry in the 1940s and 50s. Before you ask how relevant that information is to us today, just remember that the author is a film producer who claims these early films have a cult following now, perhaps because of the Gangnam rage that has spread worldwide, and has opened a glimpse into a world never before considered worthy of serious study. We couldn’t have a better introduction to film in South Korea nor have we ever had a more detailed look at the North Korean film fanatic Kim Jong-Il, who kidnapped the two leading lights in the South Korean film industry to bolster his own propaganda machine.

The beautiful and talented South Korean film star Choi Eun-Hee was kidnapped first. Fischer compares her favorably to Marilyn Monroe (with whom she was photographed) in terms of star quality and stage presence. Choi's former husband, the film director and producer Shin Sang-Ok, was taken later, though because he’d tried to escape he was imprisoned in North Korea for a number of years. Eventually they were reunited in Pyongyang and began producing films for Kim Jong-Il’s ailing film industry. This book is partially based on their memoir of their time in captivity and their successful escape to the West.

Perhaps more importantly, we learn a huge amount about the Kim regimes. This material may be out there somewhere, in a hundred escape memoirs, spy reports, or academic papers but I have never seen so much information about Kim Jong-Il and North Korea in one place before. Besides all this great new information, the writing is absolutely first-rate, the story fantastic, and the immersion into film so well-informed that it seems like a trick.

Who is Paul Fischer and how does he know so much about North Korea? The Introduction and Afterword discuss sources, and mostly my concerns about veracity of content were allayed. It may just be possible that no one ever bothered before to gather together the dispersed information in just this way before. I just don’t know. Frankly, it is Fischer’s skill that is simply stunning, besides the vast trove of collected information about the Kim regime and North Korea. The writing is rich and coherent in a way writers only dream of, and the sections pass easily into one another while we readers are led deeper into the intricacies of film lore and the strange and frightening propaganda machine of Kim Jong-Il.

I have no idea whether or not Shin Sang-Ok and his wife Choi Eun-Hee were abducted or if they defected to North Korea. In my mind it is regrettable either way but not particularly relevant now. It is not what I focused on. I have heard some of the details of kidnapping, of prisons, of life in North Korea, but nothing like this detailed look north of the 38th parallel. This book has everything: grandeur, mystery, terror, and a fluency that makes this tremendous storytelling no matter what side of the political spectrum you fall on.

This book must be labelled creative nonfiction because of the conversations recounted verbatim and the reconstructions of scenes so complete you would think Fischer 'produced' them. I don’t care. If one-fourth of the information in this is book is true we have made great headway in understanding and demystifying a completely obscure regime. You will recall the splash Truman Capote made with his fictional recreation of the nonfiction event he wrote about in In Cold Blood. Let’s call this in the same vein until we can verify, but remember this man Paul Fischer. He has burst on the literary scene with a truly stupefying and important offering. If he can make films the way he can write we are in for a real treat.

I listened to the Random House Audio production of this book, read beautifully by Stephen Park. I have ordered the print edition to look it over more carefully. As I say, books like this don’t come along very often. To think this was a debut that took about two years to put together is extraordinary.

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Feb 21, 2015

Paul Fischer answers a few questions on . WGBH Forum Institute filmed his reading at the Harvard Bookstore in Cambridge, MA and a link to the YouTube video is .
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Reading Progress

August 7, 2014 – Shelved as: to-read
August 7, 2014 – Shelved
February 3, 2015 – Started Reading
February 3, 2015 – Shelved as: asia
February 3, 2015 – Shelved as: audio
February 3, 2015 – Shelved as: foreign-affairs
February 3, 2015 – Shelved as: history
February 3, 2015 – Shelved as: crime
February 3, 2015 – Shelved as: film
February 3, 2015 –
page 150
42.49% "I can't judge the accuracy of this, but it is a terrific bio of Kim Jong-Il and his love of movies. Highly informative."
February 6, 2015 –
page 250
70.82% "I can't quite get a grasp of the author on this one. He writes VERY well indeed. But this, I can't help it, seems loaded with questionable material. This can't all have come from the 88-year-old Choi and escaped refugees. If it is largely true, this is one breakout of a book."
February 9, 2015 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-28 of 28 (28 new)

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Emma Sounds great!


message 2: by Elaine (new) - added it

Elaine Looking forward to this one.


Trish Emma wrote: "Sounds great!"

Oh, man. I'm too impressed.


Trish Elaine wrote: "Looking forward to this one."

Can't imagine anyone not thinking this a huge debut. There has only a small splash in the press. I think everyone is wondering "who is this guy?" and "can we trust his material?"


Emma When I read your review, I was like, could my local library possibly have this? And lo, two copies on order! So it must have had some attention in Australia at least. Though my library is pretty good.


Mara Get out of my head!!! If you read one more book that I've just downloaded (I'm talking maybe ten minutes ago), I might have to get an occlumency tutor and/or denounce you as a witch!


Trish Emma wrote: "When I read your review, I was like, could my local library possibly have this? And lo, two copies on order! So it must have had some attention in Australia at least. Though my library is pretty good."

He is an unknown, but the book was apparently published by a division of Random House. RH has a long reach.


Trish Mara wrote: "Get out of my head!!! If you read one more book that I've just downloaded (I'm talking maybe ten minutes ago), I might have to get an occlumency tutor and/or denounce you as a witch!"

Oh, Mara, you're going to have a blast with this one I think. After this, I promise...nothing.


Trish Zakariah wrote: "Given North Korea's habit of bizarre kidnappings--including use of minisubs to snatch Japanese sunbathers off beaches like aliens in a saucer--it is entirely plausible Shin & Choice were also kidna..."

Apparently there is an entire South Korean industry built around trying to prove these two traitors. Shin is now dead and Choi in her 90s...Life has not been especially kind.


message 10: by Trish (last edited Feb 10, 2015 10:15AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Trish Zakariah wrote: "Wow. That really stinks--reminds me of Patty Hearst. My understanding is that brain-washing and "reprogramming" to convince people to become spies was part of the kidnapping process, not just losin..."

True. But in this case these two were successful (well, in Shin's case, he was on a downward trend) and pretty happy in their careers. The punishment for trying to escape and failing was so severe, Shin wanted to wait until he was sure he could manage it. Then they wrote a memoir. Fischer, bless his soul, sounds just a little in love with Madame Choi, even though she is in her ninties.


message 11: by Mara (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mara I've barely begun, but damn- if this isn't fascinating then I don't know what is!


message 12: by Trish (last edited Feb 13, 2015 04:44AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Trish Mara wrote: "I've barely begun, but damn- if this isn't fascinating then I don't know what is!"

So glad you think so. Fischer gave a talk & reading last night at Harvard Bookstore. So furious I couldn't get there.


message 13: by Mara (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mara I have no idea whether or not Shin Sang-Ok and his wife Choi Eun-Hee were abducted or if they defected to North Korea. In my mind it is regrettable either way but not particularly relevant now. It is not what I focused on.

It's interesting that you should say that, because I basically didn't even think about that until Fischer brought it up again in the Afterword. I tried not to read commentary on the book before writing my review, but I am kind of curious about what its “detractors� might have to say. But, in the end, it was a fun story to read.


Trish Mara wrote: "I am kind of curious about what its “detractors� might have to say. But, in the end, it was a fun story to read...

I understand, but I have read enough schlock criticism online to care very little about spurious critiques that simply deny (but do not disprove) another person's take. And I know enough about dictatorial regimes to have very little concern for how they feel they are being perceived. I didn't think this was shrill in any way. I think countries (Israel, South Korea) under threat by neighboring countries have a tendency to see the world in light of that threat and it colors their worldview consequently.


message 15: by Mara (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mara Trish wrote: " And I know enough about dictatorial regimes to have very little concern for how they feel they are being perceived."

Haven't really read much, I'm inclined to believe Fischer and am less curious about it than I would have expected.

I did want to clarify, though, (from my comments here and in my own review) that I'm not worried about things seeming “too weird� for the sake of the dictators at all. It's that I, as a reader, like to have sort of hooks to grasp onto so that I can better “get� the point. I guess I find that there's a tipping point beyond which I relegate things to the land of “stuff I can't understand.� (It's my own shortcoming, of course). Tons of things are totally foreign and fascinating, and there is so much stuff I'm grateful that I've lived without experiencing. Maybe it was the funeral stuff that got to me—as soon as I read it, the Lincoln funeral train popped up in my head, and it just got me thinking (never a good thing).

I certainly wasn't hoping for Dictators—They're Just Like Us! I don't even know that there's anything missing from the book one way or another, it's a reflection of my own headspace right now. You've given me pause, though, and I'll definitely think more on it.


message 16: by Deah (new) - rated it 4 stars

Deah I just spent a week in North Korea, and believe me, it's just as weird as this book presents. Our tour guide mentioned this book and I had to read it. So glad my library had a copy!


Trish Deah wrote: "I just spent a week in North Korea, and believe me, it's just as weird as this book presents. Our tour guide mentioned this book and I had to read it. So glad my library had a copy!"

OMG, the tour guide mentioned the book! How cool is that, to have gone to North Korea: I would absolutely love to debrief you. Why did you go? How did you go? What did you see? What was your personal agenda? Were you just in Pyongyang? What went against your expectations? What went according to your expectations? Of course you don't have to answer these questions. I am amazed people from the West are still allowed in, considering the queer actions of Kim Jong-Un. He is still a wild card.


message 18: by Deah (new) - rated it 4 stars

Deah The whole thing was just surreal. Here's my journal write up of it:



Feel free to read it and ask me anything. I'm almost finished with Production and reading Escape from Camp 14 next.


Trish Deah wrote: "The whole thing was just surreal..."

Great post. Sounds like you had plenty to look at and think about. Did you try the rice beer? Does it taste anything like Coors? The orphanage/nursery is a little spooky. I hadn't heard about that before, and the clams cooked in petrol...so they just pour the petrol on and flame it? That's a recipe begotten of desperation, surely.

So, it must have been the Australian guide that told you about the book A Kim Jong-Il Production: The Extraordinary True Story of a Kidnapped Filmmaker, His Star Actress, and a Young Dictator's Rise to Power? It surely couldn't have been the North Korean guide, though that would make a great story.

That blog post was a lot of work, but a great job. Many thanks.


message 20: by Deah (new) - rated it 4 stars

Deah Yes, sorry, it was the Australian guide who mentioned this book, Nothing To Envy, Only Beautiful Please, etc. the Korean "guides" (minders) never mentioned any western books or movies about Korea.
I really wish I had read every one of these books before we went, but it was kind of spur of the moment kind of trip, and everything was arranged in less than a month. I would have had way better questions to ask! Although any time we asked sensitive questions, we were generally given a propaganda line, told we were running late, and rushed off to the next place.


message 21: by Mara (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mara Wow Deah! Trish, have you read Without You There Is No Us yet? Between this one, Escape From Camp 14 and The Orphan Master's Son, I think I was a bit too North Korea-d out to fully enjoy it, but it was definitely interesting DPRK non-fiction.


Trish Deah wrote: "Yes, sorry, it was the Australian guide who mentioned this book, Nothing To Envy, Only Beautiful Please, etc. the Korean "guides" (minders) never mentioned any western books or movies about Korea. ..."

Yes, I figured as much. Fischer was interested to know. I somehow thought at first that "guide" meant North Korean so was flummoxed, but then I realized of course you would have a western guide.


Trish Mara wrote: "Wow Deah! Trish, have you read Without You There Is No Us yet? Between this one, Escape From Camp 14 and The Orphan Master's Son, I think I was a bit too North Korea-d out to fully enjoy it, but it..."

Yes, Mara, I did read Without You, There Is No Us: My Time with the Sons of North Korea's Elite. And I get sick of scrounging for new facts, impressions, differences between the accounts. But I am interested now to have a look at Only Beautiful, Please: A British Diplomat in North Korea, which Deah recommended. You'd heard that women get a lot of cosmetic surgery in North Korea to fit some ideal vision of womanhood, right? That strikes me as a truly terrifying prospect.


message 24: by Mara (new) - rated it 4 stars

Mara Trish wrote: "And I get sick of scrounging for new facts, impressions, differences between the accounts."

Totally agreed. I'll have to check that other one out.


Karen Best Just finished reading it. I was going to write a review. I read yours first. There's nothing left to say. Thank you for putting my thoughts together so eloquently, Trish. Creative nonfiction leads us closer to whole truth; we're well on our way.


Trish Karen wrote: "Just finished reading it. I was going to write a review. I read yours first. There's nothing left to say. Thank you for putting my thoughts together so eloquently, Trish. Creative nonfiction leads ..."

Great minds think alike :)


message 27: by Tom (new) - rated it 5 stars

Tom Barber I also listened to the audiobook read by Stephen Park. Park did an excellent job and listening to this book was extremely informative. Can you imagine living in a place where betraying your neighbors or co-workers is encouraged and rewarded? I tell my 20-something sons to pay attention to North Korea because there's just not any society like it in today's world. Thanks for an excellent review.


Trish Tom wrote: "I also listened to the audiobook read by Stephen Park. Park did an excellent job and listening to this book was extremely informative. Can you imagine living in a place where betraying your neighbo..."

My pleasure, Tom. Thought this was a really interesting entree--using film-- into a closed society. The fact they love film is so intriguing. China doesn't love film but loves how it influences people, hence buying into Hollywood. Reagan also loved how film influenced people. Steve Bannon also. What a crew.


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