| Critics
Quotes |
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"Engrossing!"
- New York Times |
"Superb! Moving!"
- Sid Smith, Chicago Tribune |
"So powerful is this film that it brought tears to my eyes."
- V.A. Musetto, New York Post |
"The testimony gathered here gives the film an enduring grip!"
- Anthony Lane, New Yorker Magazine |
"Astonishing! Sheridan and Kim wring a good deal of tension from their headline-making tale!"
- Nick Schager, Slant Magazine |
"Another astonishing story from Storyville!"
- The Guardian (UK) |
"This disturbing film does justice to her (Megumi's) tale !"
- The Observer (UK) |
"Spine-tingling Narrative mastery!"
- Los Angeles Times |
"It sounds like something out of a Robert Ludlum novel, but it's heartbreakingly true!"
- Stephen Hunter, Washington Post
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"A shocking and poignant count of an outrageous and villainous international incident the world should know about."
-Jeffrey Lyons, NBC's REEL TALK |
"Very few other stories have been so instrumental in advancing the
cause against enforced disappearances as this film."
- Louise Arbour, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights |
"Fascinating!"
- New York Magazine |
"A tightly-plotted mystery!"
- Salon.com |
"Gripping!"
- Ken Fox, TV Guide |
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"TERRIFIC!"
- CNN
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"EXCEPTIONAL!"
- Variety Magazine |
“POIGNANT! AFFECTING!”
- San Fransisco Chronicle |
“ENGROSSING!”
- San Fransisco Bay Guardian |
“PROVOCATIVE!”
- The Plain Dealer |
“POWERFUL!”
- SF IST
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“RIVETING!”
- NPR |
“FASCINATING”
- Austin Chronicle
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“INCREDIBLE!”
- GREENCINE
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“MOVING!”
- NOW Magazine |
“AN EXTRAORDINARY TALE OF LOVE
AND ESPIONAGE!"
- HOTDOCS |
“SUSPENSEFUL! EXCITING! AN
EMOTIONAL WALLOP!”
- E Film Critic |
A FILM OF “STUNNING REVELATIONS!”
- Boston Pheonix |
“STRANGER THAN FICTION! A WELL-CRAFTED
PIC! ”
- VARIETY
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“WITH ALL THE NAIL-BITING TENSION
OF A MYSTERY! CRACKLING WITH INTERNATIONAL
INTRIGUE!”
- NPR
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"ABDUCTION IS ONE OF THE MOST
MOVING DOCUMENTARIES I'VE SEEN!...AMAZING
STORY!
- Lynden Barber, Director of Sydney Film Festival
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"STARTLING AND UNSETTLING"
- The Atlanta Journal-Constitution |
" *****
"
- Creative Loafing |
"GUT-WRENCHING."
- Sydney Morning Herald |
"DEEPLY UNSETTLING AND DEVASTATINGLY
SAD!"
- FFWD Weekly |
"At times it is hard to believe
this film is a documentary and not fictional!"
- Austin Chronicle |
"Megumi's story has no happy ending - her family remain unsure whether she is dead or alive, her life in North Korea shrouded in mystery - but this disturbing film does justice to her tale."
- The Observer (UK) |
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| Film
Reviews |
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"“Abduction: The Megumi Yokota Story” is an engrossing nonfiction detective tale about the 13-year-old girl of the title, who vanished on the way home from school in Niigata, Japan, in 1977. But it also succeeds as a thumbnail review of a painful chapter of Asian history, and as a portrait of lives transformed by trauma. Megumi was one of 13 Japanese citizens North Korea has admitted kidnapping as part of a program to teach spies-in-training how to pass for Japanese. As the Japanese government’s investigation of the abductions dragged on through the 1990s, it affected efforts to normalize Japanese-North Korean relations and turned the abductees’ families into media figures and political players. “Abduction” isn’t about what happened, but about the painful introspection that is sparked by not knowing."
- New York Times |
"With its puzzling missing person's story and ominous aesthetic comprised of interviews, dramatic recreations, and ghostly still
photographs, Patty Kim and Chris Sheridan's Abduction: The Megumi Yokota Story initially seems like an expanded episode of Unsolved
Mysteries. That alone wouldn't be a bad thing, as NBC's creepy 1980s serial was always meatier than its exploitative premise suggested. Yet Kim and Sheridan's doc eventually proves itself to be a more intricate and chilling work of real-crime nonfiction than its TV forerunner,
recounting its decades-spanning case with equal measures of wrenching suspense, outrage, and empathy. In November 1977, 13-year-old Japanese girl Megumi Yokota went missing on her way home from school, a disappearance that devastated her devoted parents and remained largely unanswered until, 20 years later, the astonishing truth came to light: Megumi, as well as at least 12 others (and likely many more), had been kidnapped by North Korean spies, who used their foreign captives as tools to learn how to pass themselves off as authentic Japanese. What ensued was a vigorous battle by the victims' families to motivate Prime Minister Koizumi to retrieve their loved ones, an endeavor rife with implications both global (regarding North Korea's famine crisis and negotiations over their nuclear weapons program) and intensely personal. Sheridan and Kim wring a good deal of tension from their headline-making tale as reporters and government investigators attempt to uncover North Korea's dastardly plot, though their film's lasting impact comes from its compassionate portrait of parental devotion. A kind duo driven to discover the truth about their missing child through organized protest and political pressure, Megumi's mom Sakie and dad Shigeru are repeatedly offered, and then denied, any substantial amount of closure, a frustration heartbreakingly conveyed via Sakie's dream for Megumi—in which the girl would return home to Japan and feel "liberated" and "free" from confinement—that stands as a surrogate wish for herself. Abduction pushes its poignant buttons while casting Megumi's kidnapping as a heinous crime, yet to its credit, it consistently does so with a deftly understated, devastating touch, as
when the recorded sound of Megumi delivering a choral solo gives fleeting voice to a girl whose silence (not unlike that of Kim Jong Il)
hangs heavy over the still-unresolved proceedings."
- Nick Schager, Slant Magazine |
"It
starts in spine-tingling detective saga fashion with the disappearance
of a 13-year-old Japanese girl in 1977 but suddenly turns into
an espionage tale when it's determined that the choir-singing,
beach-loving Megumi was one of multiple kidnappings at the hands
of North Korean spies...All this is rendered with not only narrative
mastery but also an exquisitely photographic and aural sense of
humanity and place, of memory and the present, with lingering
interstitial shots of Japan's natural beauty and its modern metropolises
that play as if Ozu had directed a sobering "Frontline"
report. Perhaps it's no wonder the ghostly ache of "Abduction"
— the filmmakers' poetic sense of how the missing can dominate
our lives in a way they might not have had they never vanished
— captured the eye of one of modern cinema's most resonant
chroniclers of souls in transition: Jane Campion, who joined the
project as an executive producer."
- Los Angeles Times |
"This superb, quite moving film...combines interviews, news footage and some reality TV-like sequences and works on a number of levels. It's a gruesome story of one decent family's nightmare, a shocking account of international intrigue and a case study in the Japanese character, one capable of extraordinary grace
under pressure. Those survivors who do make it home provide for powerfully moving reunion footage, and then, during their press conferences, actually
apologize for all the trouble caused by their ordeal. Meanwhile, you care very much for the Yokotas by the end, you ache for their loss and admire their stoic determination. Their agony, laced with uncertainty and helplessness, is quiet, but deadly. In a time when American TV is full of stories of missing loved ones, "Abduction" keenly explores the reactions of an altogether different society and also examines the universal, excruciating pain suffered by such victims and their families everywhere."
- Sid Smith, Chicago Tribune |
"In this moving documentary about a very bizarre political tragedy, every parent’s nightmare becomes real and then surreal...as Megumi’s parents gradually transform themselves by a sheer effort of will from simple middle-class people into the crusading heads of a populist
revolt, Abduction gains momentum and dramatic force. Plot twists that would be rejected as implausible in a Hollywood feature abound, while portraits of other abductee families range from the tragic (a woman so destroyed by the loss of her son that she spends 27 years as a weeping invalid and dies just before he is set free) to the exhilarating (the brother of an abducted woman who transitions from a lowly fish market auctioneer to a candidate for parliamentary election in the name of reclaiming his lost family member). The core story remains Megumi’s, and it’s a tragedy of uncertain resolutions and unending parental grief. Eschewing the geopolitical for the personal, Sheridan and Kim manage to tell a sweeping Cold War saga that is at its most undeniably powerful when it is focused tightly on the track of two parents’ tears."
- Ray Greene, Boxoffice Magazine
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"This moving and impeccably constructed documentary was made for Westerners, but it’s easy to understand why Abduction: The Megumi Yokota Story caused such buzz in Japan. The fate of Megumi Yokota, a 13-year-old girl kidnapped in 1977 from the northern Japanese city of
Niigata, is a bigger story in that country than elsewhere, of course. But Washington-based directors Patty Kim and Chris Sheridan distinguish their film from more decorous Japanese treatments of the case by unabashedly depicting the anger and sorrow of the people left
behind...Fury is just a small part, however, of Sheridan and Kim’s fascinating movie, which also encompasses anguish, empathy, persistence, and the sheer strangeness that can sometimes devour everyday life."
- Mark Jenkins, Washington City Paper
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"It sounds like something out of a Robert Ludlum novel, but it's heartbreakingly true, as the documentary makes clear by looking at the phenomenon not from the top down or the outside in, but from the bottom up and the inside out."
- Stephen Hunter, Washington Post |
"On the morning of Nov. 15, 1977, 13-year-old Megumi
Yokota left her house in the Japanese coastal town of
Niigata and headed off for school. Her mother, Sakie,
knew she had badminton practice after classes, but
when night began to fall and Megumi still hadn't
returned home, Sakie began to worry. As she and her
husband, Shigeru, began frantically searching the
neighborhood for some sign of their daughter, Sakie
imagined the worst: Megumi was being held by
kidnappers for ransom, or perhaps she'd been sexually
assaulted. The truth, however, would prove to be far
more unbelievable, and wouldn't become known to the
Yokota family for several years to come, when a
defecting North Korean spy confirmed a newspaper story
that had been published two years after Megumi's
disappearance. Megumi, it turned out, was one of an
untold number of Japanese citizens who, during the
late 1970s, were kidnapped by North Korean agents from
beaches near their homes, secreted away on a North
Korean ship and carried off across the Sea of Japan to
an unknown fate in a highly secretive country. (The
official number of Japanese abductees is 35, but some
estimates put the true number, which doesn't include
victims from other countries, closer to 100.) Most of
the victims were in their twenties and thirties —
Megumi looked older than her actual age, and her
kidnapping was probably a mistake — and, according to
the defecting North Korean source, they had been taken
in order to teach undercover Korean agents and
potential terrorists how to speak and behave like
native Japanese. The revelation would shock the
Japanese public. But since it came at a time when the
Japanese government was in the midst of its first
tentative diplomatic relations with the fearsome
nuclear power to the west, little would be done to
learn of the victims' current whereabouts or demand
their return. This gripping documentary from Chris
Sheridan and Patty Kim begins with the details of
Megumi's abduction, then widens its purview to include
the stories of her fellow abductees, their heartbroken
and confused families, and their tireless efforts to
stir the Japanese government into action. The film
unfolds with all the heart-stopping suspense of a
true-crime expose that sheds light on the twisted
policies of Kim Jong-il's strange and secretive
nation. At heart, it remains a wrenching
human-interest story about a group of family members
who refuse to allow their loved ones to become
casualties of international diplomacy by simply
disappearing."
-Ken Fox, TV Guide
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"Abduction" sheds light onto one of the strangest
episodes in recent Asian history, but the murk that
hangs over North Korea is still too deep for much
light to penetrate."
- Salon.com |
"If all this sounds to Western sensibilities like an
internationally flavored episode of "Law & Order,"
it's because this story, while obviously very big in
the Far East, has been relatively under-reported in
the United States. The temptation to juice up the
squalid elements of this story would be hard to resist
for most filmmakers. Yet, for the most part, directors
Chris Sheridan and Patty Kim manage to balance the
story's jolting, world-shaking elements with the more
intimate details, gathered over several years, of how
Megumi's parents cope with their loss and sustain
their hopes despite constant setbacks."
- Newsday |
" "Abduction" is a skillful interweaving of emotional, personal stories with the thicker strands of history, and a reminder that in reality
such tales rarely have a tidy end."
- The Oregonian |
“It's
hard to stop watching ABDUCTION not just because it unfolds with
all the nail-biting tension of a mystery, crackling with international
intrigue. The courage of Megumi Yokota's family, making their private
pain so painfully public, makes the film glow with love. And that
is the point of entry for
anyone into this riveting documentary.”
- NPR
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“This unusual doc
feels like a kickass episode of Unsolved Mysteries: Japan….As
the plot thickens, the film takes on the weight of a Sophoclean
play. What emerges most is a moving portrait of Yokota’s elderly
parents, resolutely pursuing the truth with dignity…”
ABDUCTION EARNS CRITIC’S PICK, 4 STARS
- NOW Magazine |
"This is the heart-breaking
tale of an innocent, young Japanese schoolgirl snatched off the
street by North Korean agents. ABDUCTION is a true-life cliffhanger!"
- Jan Wong, Author of RED CHINA BLUES
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“A tragic, multifaceted story,
with the filmmakers imparting …a sense of suspense…”
- GLOBE AND MAIL |
"If you don’t
tear up at some point during this riveting documentary about the
abduction of the titular 13-year-old Japanese girl, there is something
wrong with you. Husband-and-wife directing team Chris Sheridan and
Patty Kim create a deeply moving and suspenseful movie, revealing
layer after layer of a story that feels too surreal to be true."
- Baltimore City Paper |
A “patient, intelligently structured
documentary…”
- Eye Weekly
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“It tells a fascinating
story, in a suspenseful, exciting way, delivering the kind of emotional
punches we go to the movies for. The filmmakers make a big sprawling
story affecting on a personal, emotional level – and isn’t
that the best thing documentary can do?”
- E Film Critic
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“There was a lot of gentle sobbing,
some out and out bawling and lots of grown men surreptitiously wiping
their eyes at the theater. At one point we were distracted from
our own sniveling by the sound of low-level keening coming from
the row behind us and the realization the whole theatre was erupting
in choked-back sobs and loud sniffles…[ABDUCTION] is one very
powerful documentary. “
- SF IST
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“Winner of the
Audience Award for docs at Slamdance 2006, "Abduction: The
Megumi Yokota Story" looks, sounds and fascinates like an exceptional
episode of a true-crime series. Helmers Chris Sheridan and Patty
Kim skillfully use interviews, reportage and archival material --
and an absolute minimum of dramatic re-enactments -- to provide
narrative momentum for their stranger-than-fiction scenario. Well-crafted
pic could score...”
- VARIETY
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“[This] documentary caught me
entirely by surprise – ABDUCTION. The filmmakers have exceptional
access…To put it succinctly, this is one of the most emotionally
draining docs that I've seen in ages. If someone doesn't acquire
this film immediately, I'll have to start a company and do it myself.”
- GREENCINE
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“Husband and wife
filmmaking team Chris Sheridan and Patty Kim trace the Yokotas’
incredible 30-year quest for the truth, a personal tragedy that
builds to a clash between two nations. Mixing archival and contemporary
footage, classic reportage and impressionistic imagery, the filmmakers
pay testament to parental love for a child. Punctuated by shocking
revelations and dramatic twists and turns, ABDUCTION is an extraordinary
tale of love and espionage.”
- HOTDOCS
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"From one family's personal
anguish to the world of geopolitical intrigue...What begins as a
story of a missing girl ultimately affects the highest levels of
Japanese -North Korean relations. Unfolding like a good mystery
novel, the twists and turns might be unbelievable if they weren't
true."
- Dan Krovich, Maryland Film Festival
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"A startling and
unsettling documentary that follows the decades-long revelations
of kidnappings of at least 13 Japanese youths by North Korea in
an apparent plan for spies to learn Japanese culture for use in
worldwide espionage."
- "3 Can't Miss Flicks at the Atlanta Film Festival,"
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution |
"A harrowing, unbelievable
story, this finely crafted documentary centers on the nefarious
plot by the North Korean government to abduct Japanese children
and young adults to help them train their spies to infiltrate
other countries. The families of the stolen children, among them
the parents of 13-year-old schoolgirl Megumi Yokota, abducted
on her way home from school in 1977, fight tirelessly and for
decades to reunite with their children, expressing a level of
grief and loss it is often hard to shake."
-"*****" Creative
Loafing
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"This film keeps
us hooked from beginning to end...the suspense is intense."
- The Epoch Times |
"An emotionally penetrating
and eerie true crime with geopolitical ramifications."
- The Dallas Morning News |
| "This film is deeply
unsettling and devastatingly sad. I don’t often cry during
movies, but the tears came quickly as the dissident described how
the young girl attempted to claw her way out of a locked room on
a ship. The terror she must have felt is almost unimaginable.
Co-directors Chris Sheridan and Patty Kim capture the most private
moments of the tenacious family as their hopes are raised, and
then dashed by conflicting reports of what fate has befallen their
daughter."
- FFWD Weekly
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ABDUCTION:
A Japanese story makes waves in America
The interest
in ABDUCTION hit a fever pitch during last week’s prestigious
DocuWeek, held in Los Angeles. Before the festival even began,
ABDUCTION was greeted with a fantastic review in the Los Angeles
Times, which likened it to the films of Ozu and called it “the
most haunting and sadly relevant” of the docs on offer.
It went on to praise the filmmakers “poetic sense of how
the missing can dominate our lives in a way they might not have
had they never vanished.”
Given Sheridan
and Kim’s bent towards people, not politics, it should come
as no surprise that ABDUCTION is not a political call to action,
but rather the gentle, humanistic story of a family’s loss.
[ABDUCTION] plays almost like a ghost story as it cuts between
Megumi’s parents’ recollections and archival footage.
Most striking is the juxtaposition of Megumi’s mother interviewed
in 2005 and [in]1977. It is in that moment, that you truly realize
how long the Yokotas have lived with the uncertainty, pain, and
above all, sadness of what happened. Even as the film shifts gears
and become more mysterious and suspenseful, Sheridan and Kim are
steadfast in their commitment to making sure their story is not
simply told, but felt. We hold our breath along with Megumi’s
parents to find out Megumi’s fate….ABDUCTION becomes
a piece of political activism almost despite itself.
But perhaps
most importantly, the film is connecting with audiences, Japanese
and non-Japanese alike. Fran, in Sedona, Arizona posted the following
on the film’s website: “As a mother and grandmother,
I experienced the overwhelming angst felt by Megumi’s mother
– there can be no greater loss than having a child simply
disappear.”
- Newsweek
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"At times it is hard
to believe this film is a documentary and not fictional due to Megumi's
unbelievable saga. Her parents struggle with their own depression
and their government as Japan slowly negotiates with North Korea
on "the abduction issue," and they must endure decades
of uncertainty before any information on their daughter or the others
abducted is revealed. Executive Producer Jane Campion, and directors
Sheridan and Kim do a wonderful job of telling this story through
the eyes of Megumi's parents, eyes filled with loneliness and tears."
- Austin Chronicle |
"'Abduction' is the kind of ominous tale that will make viewers hug
their loved ones a bit tighter while walking out of the theater. It
also might make Kim Jong Il's next saber rattle a bit more frightening.
For Mr. Sheridan and Miss Kim, the film could be the start of a
promising big-screen career."
- The Washington Times |
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| Other
Downloads |
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Families
Seek Answers In N. Korea Abductions
- Washington Post (April 23, 2006)
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Slamdance Press Release - Click
here to download (pdf 76KB) or (doc
32KB)
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| Wall Street Journal
(December 17, 2005) Download
(pdf 348KB) or (jpeg
596KB) |
Radio Free Asia (in Korean) Interview
One Interview
Two
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| Abduction Postcard - Click
here to download the front (jpeg 248KB) or back (jpeg
176KB) |
Sydney Film Festival: Compelling and
Groundbreaking Films that will Get People Talking Read
it here |
| Chris and Patty with Phillip
Adams of ABC Radio National's "Late Night Live" Listen
here |
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