Dangerous
Words
http://www.freeimages.com/photo/1169333
Analysis: For N. Koreans,
Parody Has Grave Tone
by Steve Herman December
25, 2014
Editor's note: Steve
Herman, VOA's Southeast Asia Bureau Chief, previously covered the Korean
peninsula from Seoul. In 2012 he spent 10 days in North Korea and was able to
extensively interact with officers of an elite unit of the Korean People's
Army. He viewed 'The Interview' online on Thursday.
Millions of people are
expected to pay $5.99 to spend 1 hour and 52 minutes of Christmas Day viewing
online a controversial comedy that an already angered North Korea may come to
regard as subversive.
On its surface, 'The
Interview,' a Sony Pictures film about two journalists recruited by the U.S.
Central Intelligence Agency to assassinate North Korean President Kim Jong Un,
could be considered a foul-mouthed ridiculous comedy, best appreciated by
adolescent boys.
The French news agency
AFP characterizes it as a hybrid of a 'slapstick' James Bond movie and 'The
Hangover,' about a group of young men who drink themselves into an alcoholic
stupor so severe they have no recollection of the events that transpired in the
aftermath.
However, Pyongyang's
pre-release protests about the comedy and the subsequent cyberattack on Sony
Pictures, which the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation has blamed on North
Korean hackers, has propelled the film into the headlines and made it worthy of
critical scrutiny due to its geopolitical ramifications.
In the story's plot,
American TV chat show host Dave Skylark (played by James Franco) and producer
Aaron Rapoport (Seth Rogan) score the first-ever interview with Kim Jong Un
(Randall Park), 'the most reclusive leader on the planet.'
The CIA intervenes,
convincing the duo to attempt to kill Kim by a transdermal strip of
delayed-action ricin poison to rid the 'dangerous and most unpredictable
country on Earth' of its supreme leader.
Typical parody
Typical of a Hollywood
parody, things go horribly wrong before (spoiler alert!) the Americans, allied
with a comely female Korean People's Army (KPA) officer who has betrayed her
leader, shoot down Kim's helicopter just as the dictator is about to launch
nuclear missiles.
The dialogue contains
references to concentration camps, famine and firing squads. The protagonists
argue among themselves whether killing Kim will change anything. The assertion
is that the North Korean people 'must see he is not a god.'
The movie's on-screen
interview is broadcast live to the world – including to the North Korean
people, something that would be inconceivable in the real world. It begins with
soft questions along the lines of 'at this time of great stress, do you do karaoke?'
Eventually, Skylark
finds the courage to fire precise questions at the leader that any legitimate
journalist having the opportunity to do so in real life would ask. From there,
the live interview takes a dark and ultimately violent turn that leads to 'the
small faction in the existing leadership that wants change' to make its move,
launching civil war.
The happy ending has the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea preparing for its first real election.
U.S. President Barack
Obama, who has not indicated whether he has watched the movie, told reporters
Wednesday during his Hawaii vacation that he is 'glad it's being released.'
Perhaps only a handful of those viewing the movie online will be North Koreans.
Access to the Internet is extremely restricted in the reclusive country and it
is questionable how many have a credit card to enable video-on-demand access.
They will not be amused
Most North Koreans
(except those who defected) with whom this correspondent had conversed in
Pyongyang and elsewhere appeared to sincerely believe what they read in their
country's media: The United States and its allies are looking for any
opportunity to undermine their country's socialistic system and thwart its
attempts to advance, militarily and materialistically.
In a nutshell, they will
not be amused.
Most likely, they will
be horribly offended and outraged, as well as confused. But could this movie
sow seeds of doubt and act as a catalyst for undermining the regime?
North Koreans live in a
totalitarian society with a third-generation autocratic leadership where any
disrespect or even ridicule of the Kim dynasty can have dire consequences.
North Koreans have no
cultural context, under their state-run education system and media, for the
parody of a James Franco-Seth Rogan buddy movie that goes beyond just poking
fun at their country and leader. North Korea has stated release of 'The Interview'
would be an 'act of war.' It threatened 'decisive and merciless
countermeasures.'
Kookmin University
professor Andrei Lankov, who previously lived in Pyongyang, writing in The Wall
Street Journal this week, explained 'the members of the Kim family are godlike
figures in their country, so the movie was an act of blasphemy. If such an act
is left unpunished, they might reason, it sets a dangerous precedent.'
There is precedent,
however.
A decade ago, Hollywood
made fun of then-North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in 'Team America: World
Police.' But in the satire, in which the 270 characters are puppets, Kim Jong
Il outsmarts his hapless nemesis, Hans Blix, the head of the International
Atomic Energy Agency.
At that time, Pyongyang
did not have a credible missile, nuclear and cyber arsenal with which to back
up any threats. This time around, North Korea 'is likely to seek even more
destructive ways to lash out, including through its ongoing nuclear and missile
development,' predicts Scott Snyder, director of U.S.-Korea Policy at the
Council on Foreign Relations.
No understanding of US
government
The North Korean
officials this reporter has met on separate occasions in Pyongyang and Tokyo
displayed no understanding of the complexities of the American system of government,
with its three branches of checks and balances and the Constitution
guaranteeing rights such as freedom of expression.
In North Korea, all
members of the media take their cues from the state. In the United States, they
assume, it is the same. Thus, the production and distribution of 'The
Interview' to many North Koreans will be seen if not a product of the U.S.
government, something it vetted and endorsed, no matter how obviously laughable
that notion is to most of the rest of the world.
What would Kim Jong Un,
who is known to have access to Western media, including Hollywood movies, think
of himself being portrayed as a sobbing buffoon with daddy issues bent on
starting a nuclear war?
Former NBA player Dennis
Rodman is the highest-profile American to have met him and perhaps the outsider
with the best insight. Rodman, who has called Kim his 'best friend,' has been
uncharacteristically subdued about 'The Interview,' saying this week he has no
opinion about it because 'it's only a movie.'
Since the inception of
cinema, however, films have demonstrated their power to be more than mere
entertainment.
Hollywood has been
characterized as an instrument of America's soft power, conveying its culture,
political values and foreign policy.
'The Interview' is more
self-aware than it might appear at first glance. Its characters observe that
they manage to ignite a revolution in North Korea with 'nothing more than some
cameras and a question.'
In a different scene,
the film asks and answers another question: 'What's more destructive than a
nuclear bomb? Words.'
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