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NUKEWARS
S. Korea's new film heroes: N. Korean spies
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) July 23, 2013


Key inter-Korean incidents since end of Korean War
Seoul (AFP) July 23, 2013 - In the 60 years since an armistice was signed ending hostilities in the 1950-53 Korean War, numerous incidents and clashes -- most instigated by North Korea -- have threatened the official ceasefire.

Here are 10 of the most significant incidents, some of which came perilously close to plunging the Korean peninsula back into a full-scale conflict.

January 19, 1967 - North Korean artillery units fire on a South Korean vessel, the Dangpo, patrolling in the Yellow Sea with 70 sailors on board. The ship sinks, killing 39 of the crew.

Jan 21, 1968 - A team of 31 North Korean commandos infiltrates within striking distance of President Park Chung Hee's Blue House office/residence complex, before being intercepted by South Korean security. All but two killed in a series of ensuing gun battles. One survivor reveals their mission was to assassinate Park.

August 18, 1976 - North Korean soldiers attack a work party trying to chop down a tree inside the demilitarised zone (DMZ). Two US army officers are killed in what becomes known as the "axe murder incident".

October 9, 1983 - North Korea bombs a mausoleum in Yangon, Burma, during a visit by South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan. He survives but 21 people, including some government ministers, are killed.

November 29, 1987 - A bomb planted by two North Korean agents on a Korean Air flight explodes over the Andaman Sea, killing all 115 people on board. Both agents try to avoid capture by ingesting cyanide but one is taken alive.

September 1996 - A North Korean submarine on a spying mission runs aground off the eastern South Korean port of Gangneung. Nearly all the 25 crew and infiltrators end up killed after a 45-day manhunt.

June 15, 1999 - South Korean and North Korean naval ships clash off the border island of Yeonpyeong in the Yellow Sea. One North torpedo boat is sunk and three patrol boats badly damaged. North Korean casualties were estimated at around 50.

June 29, 2002 - Another naval clash of Yeonpyeong results in the sinking of a South Korean patrol boat with the loss of six lives.

March 26, 2010 - The South Korean corvette Cheonan sinks near Baengnyong island in the Yellow Sea, killing 46 sailors. An international investigation concludes that it had been torpedoed by a North Korean submarine. Pyongyang denies the charge.

November 23, 2011 - North Korea shells Yeonpyeong island, killing four people -- two marines and two civilians.

They are handsome, daring, patriotic and multi-lingual elite fighters who dodge bullets while remaining loyal to their women and families. Meet the new heroes of South Korean cinema -- North Korean spies.

Portrayed by Hollywood as merciless terrorists in films such as "White House Down", South Korean film is increasingly depicting North Korean agents as conflicted action heroes whose personal struggles embody a divided Korean peninsula.

Such films, unimaginable a few decades ago, have been embraced by young South Koreans who have no memory of the horrors of the Korean War and harbour less hostility towards their communist neighbour than older generations.

Both sides remain technically at war after the Korean conflict ended with an armistice six decades ago. Tension along the heavily-fortified border erupts sporadically into deadly clashes, while both sides have sent spies tasked with assassinating key figures or collecting state secrets.

For South Korean filmmakers, the North is a "perfect inspiration" allowing them to mix fantasy with the realities of a neighbour that often threatens to turn Seoul into a "sea of flame".

"The North is such a mysterious, little-known nation that there's ample room to use one's imagination on top of the actual reality," said film critic Kim Sun-Yub.

The death of longtime ruler Kim Jong-Il in 2011 further inspired moviemakers, said Jang Cheol-Soo, director of the recent hit "Secretly, Greatly."

The tragicomic action film, seen by 6.9 million since its release in June, is the third highest-selling South Korean film so far this year.

"No other characters can epitomise such turbulent and uncertain times like this than a North Korean spy," Jang told AFP.

The story of an elite spy sent to live in a Seoul shantytown with a mission to kill key figures, Jang's film sees the young assassin pose as a village idiot to mingle with neighbours without drawing suspicion. But he is soon enamoured with his caring, good-hearted neighbours -- before unexpected tragedy unfolds.

The second-highest grossing South Korean film this year is another star-studded spy thriller, seen by 7.1 million people. "The Berlin File" features a North Korean secret agent trying to defect to the South with his wife, an embassy translator.

Both films are fictions that brush with real life events such as the deadly inter-Korea naval clash in 2002, or the rise to power of the North's new ruler Kim Jong-Un.

Citizens in the South are still urged to report spies for hefty cash rewards, although not as strongly as in the past when children were taught at school how to recognise spies by their behaviour or accent.

As recently as 2011, a North Korean agent was arrested in Seoul and charged with attempting to murder an outspoken anti-Pyongyang activist with a poison-tipped weapon.

-- A human face --

The last remaining legacy of the Cold War has inspired hordes of North Korea-themed films in the South for decades.

One high-profile case saw a group of 30 elite North Korean commandos gunned down in downtown Seoul in 1968 after they secretly crossed the border with a mission to kill then-South Korean President Park Chung-Hee.

Cross-border reconciliation in the late 1990s under the engagement policy of the late South Korean ex-presidents Kim Dae-Jung and Roh Moo-Hyun encouraged filmmakers to put a human face on North Koreans, who were previously portrayed as soulless villains under Seoul's anti-communist army regimes that had ruled until the 1980s.

Director Jang said that top young actors are now vying for North Korean spy roles, as opposed to fearing the impact such parts might have on their image.

Since 2010, five high-profile spy films have been released and three more are in production, including "Red Family" by acclaimed director Kim Ki-Duk, whose anti-capitalist tale "Pieta" won the best movie at the Venice festival last year.

The popularity of such spy films marks a sea change from the past, when casting North Korean characters in any positive light was a grave offence against state censors and the notorious National Security Law.

Late legendary director Lee Man-Hee was arrested and charged in 1965 with portraying North Korean soldiers as "humane and merciful human beings" in an anti-communist film he was making.

Even casting good-looking actors as North Korean characters was frowned upon by Seoul's infamous intelligence agency, which often warned producers against "giving wrong impressions about communists" to youngsters.

Now the tide has turned.

The protagonist of "Secretly, Greatly" was played by one of Seoul's most popular TV heartthrobs, Kim Soo-Hyun, with the screams of fans rocking cinemas during initial screenings when the actor emerged on screen.

"He looked so gorgeous in the North Korean military suit...the hottest North Korean spy ever!" one fan gushed on an Internet chatroom overflowing with praise for the protagonist.

But film critic Kim cautioned that the recent batch of spy movies tend to "overly humanise" communist spies who in reality still make headlines in Seoul as menacing force.

"Most of the recent spy films are skewed too much to the opposite end of the anti-communist films we saw back in the 1970s, "Kim said, calling the trend as part of efforts to "balance things out from the past".

Jang dismissed the criticism, saying today's young audience are too smart to confuse movie characters with real-world spies.

Jang Ce-Yul, the North's ex-senior military officer who defected to Seoul in 2008, called such films "a fantasy" for showing spies who hesitate to kill.

"Secret agents are thoroughly trained and waste no time killing those who notice their identity, whether you are a little girl or a nice old lady," Jang, the head of the group of ex-North Korean soldiers in Seoul, told AFP.

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