The Big Picture: Monster's Movie

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Stabby Joe

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Jul 30, 2008
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Actually I had heard of this one. The second I saw the title of this video, the Team America puppet and Bob's tradition of talking of weird movies... he's going to talk about Pulgasari.

I heard of this film when watching a tongue-in-cheek style documentary about the strange personal tastes of dictators including Saddam's erotic fantasy art, Mao's womanizing and Amin's boasted cannibalism...

...actually I also remember this tubby one and his film not being the only strange thing about his habbits.

BTW anyone else think Team America was ahead of its time?
 

emeraldrafael

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Jul 17, 2010
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I could hve swore Moviebob covered this ometime before and talked about it. or at least if you look anhwere around the internet about N. Korea being weird/N. Korea you'd see it.
 

Ninedeus

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Feb 26, 2010
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Wow, and here I thought that Gaddafi's obsession with Condoleezza Rice was pretty weird. Reinforces the statement that absolute power corrupts (minds included apparently) absolutely.
 

Orinon

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OMG I saw Galgamneth when I was a kid, I didn't get a lot of the plot because I was a kid but hey I loved the little monster who got bigger.
And I was noticing similarities to that movie, Now I want to see the original one. ANd I want to see Galgameth again.
 

Subject7

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Nov 2, 2010
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Lol, was he given amnesty on the grounds that he would be the one to make the 3 Ninjas sequels cause no one else would? Still I agree, his life would make an awesome movie akin to The Devil's Double.
 

Zhukov

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Dec 29, 2009
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I just find it hilarious that he made them get re-married.

It's like he took living vicariously through celebrities to a whole new level.
 

Darren716

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I kind of hope North Korea's new leader is as crazy as his father so we can get more stories like this.
 

Aureliano

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Mar 5, 2009
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That was the best. Also, I'm really glad that Bob took out a syllable or two from the 'weird' in "BLANK IS/ARE WEIRD". I finally no longer fear that word on this show.
 

Little2Raph

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Aug 27, 2011
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Ah, Kim Jong-Il, you crazy korean bastard. May you burn in hell for eternity.

I'd find his supervillian antics a lot funnier if it weren't for the millions of lives he destroyed and the abject misery he's forced upon the people of north korea.
 

C.S.Strowbridge

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Jul 22, 2010
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Amazingly, I knew that story. Maybe not all of the details, but I knew about the kidnappings, the movies, and the eventual escape.
 

Endocrom

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Apr 6, 2009
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Thank you Bob, that was the best part of my day.

We need to find out what movies Kim Jong-Un likes and if any of their directors have gone missing within the past ten years.
 

Monsterfurby

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Le_Lisra said:
I actually saw Galgameth sometime in the nineties on superRTL :D
Same here, same station, actually. For some reason, Germany seemed to like that movie enough to broadcast it regularly in the late 90s.

With the background story, of course, it becomes strangely more interesting. Also: why has no one made a movie about Kim Jong Il's abduction and subsequent "employment" of Shin Sang-ok yet? That would be perfect material in my book.
 

MetalMagpie

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Kapol said:
The idea that the director had the courage to basically give Kim Jong the finger in his own movie is awesome though.
Steve the Pocket said:
I always suspected Kim was a bit thick, but missing the obvious symbolism in having the monster that by his own demand represented Communism turn on the people it fought to save?
esperandote said:
The director guy really had balls to do that. Kim Jong didn't noticed it or punished him?
Actually, Bob may have got the wrong idea on that one.

The BBC claims the film is actually meant to be a cautionary tale about Capitalism, not an inspirational film about Communism. So the message is "Capitalism may appear to liberate you, but in the end it will just enslave you in a different way".

North Korean propaganda is (supposedly) very focused on the idea of "Capitalist Greed" as a insatiable force. Hence the big monster demanding to be fed iron.

C.S.Strowbridge said:
Amazingly, I knew that story. Maybe not all of the details, but I knew about the kidnappings, the movies, and the eventual escape.
It was repeated ad nauseam by the British press in the week(s) after he died. Maybe you saw it on the BBC news website?

Sylveria said:
Wonder how long till the president starts claiming divine right.
Well, the first thing he'd need to do is remove the two-terms limit. In the UK, we really can have Prime Ministers who rule for decades (providing they keep being voted back in). We also have a monarch who really is the head of the Church of England, with all the "divine right" that goes with it.

So I think you're pretty safe. The USA is quite a long way away from having a dictatorship. ;)
 

Kapol

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MetalMagpie said:
Kapol said:
The idea that the director had the courage to basically give Kim Jong the finger in his own movie is awesome though.
Steve the Pocket said:
I always suspected Kim was a bit thick, but missing the obvious symbolism in having the monster that by his own demand represented Communism turn on the people it fought to save?
esperandote said:
The director guy really had balls to do that. Kim Jong didn't noticed it or punished him?
Actually, Bob may have got the wrong idea on that one.

The BBC claims the film is actually meant to be a cautionary tale about Capitalism, not an inspirational film about Communism. So the message is "Capitalism may appear to liberate you, but in the end it will just enslave you in a different way".

North Korean propaganda is (supposedly) very focused on the idea of "Capitalist Greed" as a insatiable force. Hence the big monster demanding to be fed iron.
Well, it's always possible that the director left that intentionally vague, or explained it to be so to avoid punishment. The way Bob explained it makes it seem like that interpretation could be more accurate to what was intended. Of course, if the giant monster was meant to symbolize Capitalism, then what were the forces he fought meant to represent? It seems like they would then represent communism, since that what the country uses for a system of government.

Though I'm really more suggesting possibilities then anything definite. I've never seen the movie. So I can't really say one way or the other what it does or does not mean. I couldn't tell you if the BBC is right or Bob is right. Not that it matters anyways.