Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
My Home Village (Korean: 내 고향; Hanja: 내 故鄕; RR: Nae gohyang; MR: Nae kohyang) is a 1949 North Korean propaganda war melodrama film directed by Kang Hong-sik. It is the first feature film to be made in North Korea after its 1948 establishment. The film portrays the liberation of Korea from Japanese colonial rule in 1945.
Films about the Korean independence movement. Note that the movement took place internationally, in China, Japan, and the United States. Thus, if a film takes place in Korea and is explicitly about the Korean independence movement, then both this category and Category:Films set in Korea under Japanese rule can apply.
Korean comfort women on Okinawa being interviewed by U.S. marines after liberation. During World War II, many ethnic Korean girls and women (mostly aged 12–17) were forced by the Japanese military to become sex slaves on the pretext of being hired for jobs, such as a seamstresses or factory workers, and were forced to provide sexual service ...
Films about the Korean independence movement (22 P) Pages in category "Films set in Korea under Japanese rule" The following 49 pages are in this category, out of 49 total.
The early Korean Christian missionaries both led the Korean independence movement active from 1890 through 1907, and later the creation of a Korean liberation movement from 1907 to 1945. [28] Korean Christians suffered martyrdoms, crucifixions, burnings to death, police interrogations and massacres by the Japanese.
For Freedom) is a 1946 Korean film directed by Choi In-kyu. It was one of the first films made in the country after achieving independence from Japan. During the colonial period, Choi was only allowed to make certain films, but the plot of Viva Freedom! is distinctly different, telling the story of a Korean patriotic resistance fighter in 1945.
The Steel Helmet, 1951; Fixed Bayonets!, 1951 A Yank in Korea, 1951; Korea Patrol, 1951; I Want You, 1951; Tokyo File 212, 1951; Submarine Command, 1951; Japanese War ...
Living Souls) is a 2000 North Korean film directed by Kim Chun-song. The film is an epic dramatisation of a mysterious explosion sinking the Ukishima Maru, while it was on a trip to repatriate Koreans in the wake of World War II. The explosion ship sank 10 days after Japan surrendered to the United States on 15 August 1945. The film supports ...