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Beyond Utopia Poster

Beyond Utopia

See a place few have ever seen.
2023 | 116m | English

(4832 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 1 (history)

Director: Madeleine Gavin
Writer: Madeleine Gavin
Staring:
Details

A courageous pastor uses his underground network to rescue and aid North Korean families as they risk their lives to embrace freedom.
Release Date: Oct 23, 2023
Director: Madeleine Gavin
Writer: Madeleine Gavin
Genres: History, Documentary
Keywords refugee, pastor, geopolitics, political documentary, underground movement, north korean defector, north korea
Production Companies Ideal Partners, XRM Media, Human Rights Foundation, 19340 Productions, RandomGood Foundation, The deNovo Initiative
Box Office Revenue: $6,800
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Barbara Demick Self
Kim Sung-eun Self
Lee Hyeon-seo Self
Lee So-yeon Self
Kim Jong-un Self (archive footage)
Kim Jong-il Self (archive footage)
Kim Il-sung Self (archive footage)
Kim Jong-nam Self (archive footage)
Jang Song-thaek Self (archive footage)
Ri Sol-ju Self (archive footage)
Douglas MacArthur Self (archive footage)
Name Job
Adam Taylor Original Music Composer
Madeleine Gavin Editor, Second Unit Director of Photography, Writer, Director, Archival Footage Research
Taylor Page Original Music Composer
Kim Hyun-seok Director of Photography
Jeremy S. Bloom Sound Effects Editor
Robert Hein Sound Effects Editor
Eliza Paley Dialogue Editor
Bill Sweeney Dialogue Editor
Daniel Timmons Supervising Sound Editor
Tony Volante Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Name Title
Jana Edelbaum Producer
Rachel Cohen Producer
Sue Mi Terry Producer
Nina Sing Fialkow Executive Producer
David Fialkow Executive Producer
Geralyn White Dreyfous Executive Producer
Dawn Bonder Co-Executive Producer
Alexia Blaze Co-Executive Producer
Blaine Vess Co-Executive Producer
Esther Vess Co-Executive Producer
Sharon Chang Executive Producer
Michael Y. Chow Executive Producer
Megan Gelstein Executive Producer
Thor Halvorssen Executive Producer
Cristina Ljungberg Executive Producer
Hannah Song Executive Producer
Victoria Steventon Executive Producer
Sue Turley Executive Producer
Marci Wiseman Co-Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 12 18 6
2024 5 11 16 6
2024 6 14 31 6
2024 7 21 60 9
2024 8 35 65 20
2024 9 20 24 17
2024 10 22 40 11
2024 11 16 34 7
2024 12 13 32 7
2025 1 9 12 6
2025 2 8 13 1
2025 3 4 15 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 1 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 3 5 0
2025 10 0 1 0

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Ably stitched together using hand-held, mobile phone and other discreetly shot footage, this documentary tells of people desperate to flee the poverty and oppression they face living in North Korea. It principally follows one particular family who must travel, at great peril to themselves, their gui ... des and "brokers" across the Yalu river into China before continuing through Vietnam, Laos and hopefully across the Mekong into the safety of Thailand. Along the way, though, we are also introduced to other people with equally horrendous stories to tell of family stuck in a nation where malnutrition is rife, clean water is scarce and you are even expected to provide your own poo to the government for use as fertiliser! You must regularly dust your obligatorily hung photos of the "Dear Leader" else you're in for a severe beating... Indeed, for much of this film of all that's dystopian about life there, you could be forgiven for thinking it was all a figment in the mind of some fiction writer - except, I doubt they could make it up! There's a strong testament to the perseverance and resilience of the travellers - young and old - as they struggle with the fear and the jungle to make good their escape. What we see here is that, clearly, this is no walk in the park and it seems to me that many more don't make it than do - and that those who did were shocked by the false messages being conveyed to the outside world by their erstwhile leaders. The intimate nature of the photography and the simple evocative narrative work well here, too, and by midway through I genuinely felt invested in the survival and prosperity of these fundamentally decent people who were just "born in the wrong country"

Jan 05, 2024
Brent_Marchant
8.0

In today’s world, it’s almost unfathomable that there are places that exist on this planet that operate on the principles of unbridled cruelty, deliberate deception and mass brainwashing, with even the slightest of infractions capable of leading to banishment to remote gulags, brutal beatings and ev ... en savage public executions. However, such are the conditions of everyday life in North Korea, a paranoid, ruthless regime that doesn’t hesitate to inflict such indignities on its population and deprive residents of knowledge of anything beyond its borders. In a United Nations human rights report, the unthinkable tactics employed here have been described as being on par with those that were used in Nazi Germany. So it’s no wonder there are many who want to escape this harsh reality – that is, at least among those who are able to see beyond the artifice of the false utopian picture that officials have painted of their sorrowful nation. Getting out is far from easy, however, a harrowing venture that often requires defectors to flee northward to China and then maneuver through the challenging terrain of several neighboring Asian countries rather than simply crossing into nearby democratic South Korea, a sanctuary walled off by a de facto combat zone boobytrapped with countless land mines. Seeing what refugees must endure is the aim of documentarian Madeleine Gavin’s latest offering, a compilation of defector stories, including those who have succeeded in escaping and those attempting to do so. The latter are compellingly filmed with firsthand, on-the-ground footage, with no reenactments, showing in detail the ordeals they must go through to make their flights to freedom, sometimes successful, sometimes not. In the process, the film also provides audiences with a concise yet comprehensive history of how North Korea reached this point while revealing some little-known troubling secrets about everyday life in this mysterious land, many of which most outsiders have probably never heard of, let alone seen. Because of this, some of the picture’s imagery may be considered quite disturbing, especially for sensitive viewers, so those who are easily upset by such troubling visuals should take note. Nevertheless, this BAFTA Award-nominated release is an important piece of filmmaking that those outside this inscrutable enclave should know about – and hope that the world can help to overcome.

Jan 25, 2024