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Under the Sun

Original title: V luchakh solntsa
  • 2015
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
5.3K
YOUR RATING
Under the Sun (2015)
Trailer for Under the Sun
Play trailer2:15
2 Videos
23 Photos
Documentary

A propaganda documentary about North Korea that reveals a few hidden facts because the director continues filming between the scripted scenes.A propaganda documentary about North Korea that reveals a few hidden facts because the director continues filming between the scripted scenes.A propaganda documentary about North Korea that reveals a few hidden facts because the director continues filming between the scripted scenes.

  • Director
    • Vitaliy Manskiy
  • Writer
    • Vitaliy Manskiy
  • Stars
    • Lee Zin-Mi
    • Yu-Yong
    • Hye-Yong
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    5.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Vitaliy Manskiy
    • Writer
      • Vitaliy Manskiy
    • Stars
      • Lee Zin-Mi
      • Yu-Yong
      • Hye-Yong
    • 27User reviews
    • 50Critic reviews
    • 81Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 12 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos2

    Under the Sun
    Trailer 2:15
    Under the Sun
    Under the Sun Trailer
    Trailer 2:14
    Under the Sun Trailer
    Under the Sun Trailer
    Trailer 2:14
    Under the Sun Trailer

    Photos22

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    Top cast7

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    Lee Zin-Mi
    • Self
    Yu-Yong
    • Self - Zin-Min's schoolmate
    Hye-Yong
    • Self - Zin-Min's schoolmate
    Oh-Gyong
    • Self - Zin-Min's schoolmate
    Choi Song-min
    • Self
    Lim Soo-Yong
    • Self
    Su-Yong
    • Self
    • Director
      • Vitaliy Manskiy
    • Writer
      • Vitaliy Manskiy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    7.45.3K
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    Featured reviews

    iNickR

    The Manipulators Become The Manipulated

    This is a documentary that sheds an unflattering light on the propaganda machine within the hermit kingdom known as North Korea. It's safe to wager that Russian filmmaker Vitaliy Manskiy didn't tell DPRK officials of his plans ahead of time.

    To the North Korean government, the premise of the documentary is to follow an ideal family as their 8-year-old daughter, Lee Zin-mi, prepares to join the Children's Union (run by the Workers' Party) on the Day of the Shining Star (that's a fancy term for the North's "founder", Kim Jong-il's birthday). It's a great idea for a propaganda film! Anything that spews respect and admiration for the Great Leader will go over well in North Korea. Not to mention the reassurance and comfort the citizens will feel knowing how great and wonderful and protective Big Brother is.

    What we end up seeing, however, is less propaganda and more how a propaganda film is made and that's not exactly favorable to the regime. The family patriarch, whose name we never do learn, is a print journalist, but that doesn't fit with the filmmaker's (government handlers') vision. For this "documentary", Zin-mi's father is an engineer in a garment factory. The reason for this sudden change of career becomes rather evident a little later during a ridiculously staged event. Mother works at a soy milk factory, an "essential job" that contributes to the excellent health of her family and friends. "Workshop" as the Handler likes to correct, "Not a factory." And it's not friend, it's Comrade because "it sounds better." It doesn't take too long to see where this film is going. Manskiy's handlers have scripted nearly every move the camera makes, and every word spoken.

    The handlers are master exploiters, and the exploited are terrified. You can see it in their expressions and in their actions. If this were a movie you'd be laughing at the horrible acting. But this isn't acting, it's real. Frighteningly real. It's what happens after the camera supposedly stops rolling that makes this documentary. Manskiy dutifully films the action his handlers have scripted, almost as if he acquiesced to his role of propaganda cameraman. Unbeknownst to his handlers though, it is them who will be the stars of this film because the camera continues to record long after they believe it to be off. The manipulator becomes the manipulated.

    TWO things you'll LIKE about "Under the Sun": 1) You'll learn a few things about North Korea, and you'll be thankful you don't live there. 2) There is no narrator per se, but there is some written text that appears on the screen every so often that further analyzes (albeit subjectively) a scene. There is English subtitles for spoken dialogue. It's important to listen (read) to what is being said. There's a particularly heart-wrenching scene where Manskiy, who is filming a crying girl, asks the handler to help her. The response is as disturbing as it is sad.

    TWO things you'll DISLIKE: 1) Although informative, this film doesn't quite show enough of the neglected underbelly of North Korea. You won't see the starving and emaciated we often hear about. You won't see the abuses or horrifying examples of what happens to those who don't clap loud enough or aren't as effusive as they should be when instructed. Just as well, anyway, because what we do play witness to is troubling enough. 2) Some scenes are a little longer than they should be, almost to the point of being boring.
    8Waupli

    Conflicting Feelings

    This documentary is very important. It helps to show the manipulation that must go on daily in North Korea. The constant reminders to "be more joyful" or to act "with patriotism" demonstrate this. It is well worth watching, if for no other reason that to see how Orwellian the world can become if allowed.

    But by the end of the film, I felt sympathy for everyone involved. The children, the parents, and even the handlers.

    While the children and parents are being directed by the handlers, the handlers are following the directions of those above them, and so on. These handlers are simply people who want to do their jobs and avoid punishment, the same as everyone else. You can see it, especially in one scene towards the end, when they are tucking Zin-mi into bed. The North Korean director looks as tired as anyone else, and as downtrodden. Everyone has a role to play, it seems.

    The film is conflicting because you have to wonder what could happen to these people for their failure to censor this film adequately. Or for their failure to act appropriately patriotic in some of the takes that the censors didn't want us to see. We have to hope that the honesty of this film didn't lead to anyone coming to harm.
    9ksandness

    What Were the North Koreans Thinking?

    The European and Russian filmmakers were invited by the North Korean government to make a documentary that glorified their country, but the filmmakers managed to subvert the intent of the film by keeping the cameras running while the government handlers were giving instructions to the participants. Other reviewers have discussed the ways in which the government handlers coached the participants and created fake backgrounds for the family.

    But it is the unstaged scenes that really give an indication of the totalitarian nature of the country. I have ridden subways in New York, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, London, Stockholm, Tokyo, and Seoul, and I have never seen, nor could I have imagined, a scene like the one after Zin-mi's initiation into the Children's Union. (That's a surreal event in itself, especially the unison applause that all stops at the same time.) That is, literally hundreds of parents and children are at the subway station, returning from what is supposed to be a momentous occasion, and none of the parents or children say a word. They wait silently for the train, and they ride it silently, looking rather depressed.

    Or take the arrival at work. Everyone silently stands in line, and they are expected to bow to a billboard of the Kim family before turning at a right angle and entering the building. After dancers in colorful costumes rehearse outside, they silently board buses. Nobody seems to talk in public or show anything but a blank facial expression. Even in more intimate scenes, even among the children, people seem to be looking for cues as to what is permitted or appropriate.

    This is not "Communism." I was in China in 1990 and in Cuba in 2011, and in both countries, people talk and show emotions in public.

    It is telling that the North Koreans saw all the footage (except what the filmmakers held back) and still approved it. Are they so into their own mindset that they don't know that foreigners would be creeped out by a society in which people act like robots in public?
    8peterhric009

    Upsetting, Heartbreaking and Surreal

    This would be a great documentary if permitted so by North Korea. However, movies transfer emotions from the location or situation to a person watching it. As my summary says, it did it perfectly. We cant really see what is happening inside North Korea and how people live their every day lives but this certainly gives an idea how it may be in reality. It still leaves a great deal of details to our imagination but certainly gives us a hint.

    I will not comment or review this piece from a technical point of view as I could not focus on this part watching this. What we need to focus on, are certain aspects of life in North Korea and this staged documentary surely gives us an overview. You end up feeling upset, angry and at the same time heartbroken and in tears.

    Filmmakers deserve thumbs up for trying to achieve the impossible and they did the best from what they have been permitted to get and still came out of country all together and alive.
    9reddwarf-59222

    Very good, very scary film

    First, to the people decrying this film as mere propaganda, I say you are either: 1. North Korean agents trying to put a happy face on a horrible situation, or, 2. are just plain dumb. if you honestly think the DPRK is a paradise, I triple dog dare any of you to pack up your Che Guevara t-shirts and move there.

    If you actually pay attention to the film, you will see many, although sadly, not all, of the people look sad, frightened, beaten down, or all 3.

    Places like North Korea are true hells on earth and how ANYONE can defend a regime such as this is beyond my ken.

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    Documentary

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Crazy credits
      The script of this film was assigned to us by the North Korean SOE. They also kindly provided us with an around the clock escort service, chose our filming locations and looked over all the footage we shot to make sure that we did not make any mistakes in showing the life of a perfectly ordinary family in the best country in the world, with a daughter preparing to join the Children's Union - her first step on the way to becoming a part of the system dreamed by the Great Kim Il-Sung.
    • Connections
      Featured in Eshenepozner: Vitaly Mansky (2020)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Under the Sun?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 12, 2016 (Latvia)
    • Countries of origin
      • Russia
      • Germany
      • Czech Republic
      • Latvia
    • Official sites
      • Deckert Distribution (Germany)
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • Under solen
    • Filming locations
      • Pyongyang, North Korea
    • Production companies
      • Vertov Studio
      • Saxonia Entertainment
      • Hypermarket Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €390,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $105,036
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $15,454
      • Jul 10, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $305,993
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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