On April 28, 1986, two students, 20-year-old Kim Se Jin and Lee Jae Ho, burned themselves to death and shouted slogans: "No war, no nuclear weapons, Yankee goes home." sign the peace treaty with North Korea "and" expel the American imperialists. "This took place during a public demonstration against compulsory coercion of students, along with about 400 students held at the Sinrim Junction in front of the Seoul National Main gate of the university. The manner of her death, the radical nature of her slogans (these were the first openly anti-American statements heard in public since the end of the Korean War) shocked Korean society at the time. Twenty years have passed since then. The world has changed. The heads of state of North and South Korea hold a summit for the second time. The United States is discussing the possibility of signing a non-aggression pact with one of the earlier "Axis of Evil" regimes. Only a few Koreans living in 1986 could have foreseen it all. What about the death of these two young men? What are your friends and colleagues doing today? What did they remember and what did they forget about this shocking event? Have they changed as much as the world has changed? Will their faces register masks of complacency or discrepancies in disagreement? "The story does not flow away from us, but approaches us." The friends and colleagues of the two young men and the director exchange the positions of an interviewer and an interview participant to testify to the elusive truth.
- Native titles: 는 낯선 나라 다
- Also known as: Gwageoneun Nachseon Narada,
- Genres: Drama, documentary
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