LOS ANGELES: Earning your subject’s trust is never easy for a documentary filmmaker — but it is even harder when they think you want to kill them.

That was the challenge faced by US director Madeleine Gavin, whose movie “Beyond Utopia” follows newly escaped North Korean defectors as they flee.

These include the Roh family and their elderly grandmother, who Gavin met just weeks after they bolted from their deeply repressive, reclusive homeland, and lifetimes of being fed propaganda. “I’ll never forget the way that she would look at me,” Gavin said.

In their minds at the time, “Americans practically only exist to make North Koreans miserable and to kill and attack North Koreans. “We aren’t even human beings... that’s what they’ve been taught.”

Soon after the Rohs sneaked across the closely guarded border into China, a local farmer connected them to an “Underground Railroad” for defectors, run by a South Korean pastor whom Gavin happened to be filming.

The pastor arranged for the family to travel in secret through Communist-ruled China, Vietnam and Laos, braving police checkpoints and a treacherous jungle border crossing.

The movie uses footage shot in China by the pastor’s “brokers,” before Gavin was able to meet and film them face-to-face herself in south-east Asia. At first, Gavin felt “a deep distrust and suspicion” from the family.

But despite the powerful brainwashing they had endured in North Korea, even the 80-year-old grandmother’s attitude quickly began to shift as she saw the outside world with her own eyes. “She was having none of it... She’d always been told that relative to the rest of the world, North Koreans are the luckiest people on Earth,” said Gavin.

“Then to be seeing a world where there are animals, and life, and toilets, even! We were a piece of that puzzle.”

‘The worst thing’

When Gavin first set out to make her film it focused on North Koreans already living for many years in South Korea. On arrival in the south, many defectors attend a “resettlement facility” where they are taught about the rest of the world, the lies of Kim Jong Un’s brutal regime, and basic modern practices such as how to use an ATM.

But after meeting Pastor Kim Sung-eun, a prominent South Korean missionary involved in the underground network that brings escapees to the South, Gavin restructured the film to chronicle two families as they flee the north.

The documentary follows Soyeon Lee, a mother who has long since escaped North Korea, but is now trying to smuggle out the son she had to leave behind. Tragedy strikes as he is captured in China, and sent back to North Korea to face punishment.

Filming the mother’s anguish “was really the most difficult thing,” said Gavin.

“What she has gone through and continues to go through is the worst thing that anyone can go through.”

‘Guilt’

The other part of the film follows the Roh family as they embark on their harrowing, 3,000-mile overland journey toward Thailand, and freedom. One slip-up could see them also repatriated to North Korea, lending the documentary a dramatic tension more associated with Hollywood thrillers.

Published in Dawn, October 23rd, 2023

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