23 Commentaires

  1. Im preety sure if they were on there shoes they would no its not right to film,, i mean i garentee alot of ppl died when this film aired the messed up part is they dont care about there lifes they just care about there filming. Reason why the faces are not fully blured out.

  2. 3:10 A subtle difference, but the North Korean worker actually said, “What’s there to like [here]?”—not “Here isn’t anything to like.”

    By posing it as a rhetorical question, this man invited us to imagine life through his eyes—what really is there to like about being conscripted to work for years in a foreign country away from your family and friends, to work under constant surveillance and pressure to meet unreasonable expectations everyday, only to see his meager wages largely garnished by his government.

  3. What does “we should not say that it is to earn more money” (3:18) mean? Does it mean that they came to Russia to earn more money but they don’t want to admit that, or is the worker correcting them that, while somewhat true, their purpose in logging in Russia isn’t to earn more money?

  4. This is disgusting it's out and out slave labour and thet can't even run away because the North korean state basically hold their family hostage! Imagine not seeing your wife and children for 3-5 years at a time and this 'break' they go back for is literally 2 weeks and these poor bastards are exploited by countries all over the world. North korea send them to do jobs for a fraction of the wages and get those wages paid straight to them. I really feel for these people.

  5. Do you know the living condition of the workers of Rubber gardens in Thailand? from where Western Tire companies are making millions of dollars. or the living condition of coco farmers in Ghana? From where big europian/American chocolate companies are making tons of money.

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