Release Date : Aug 10, 2007 Limited Genre Movie :Documentary,Art House & International,Special Interest
Mpaa Rating : Unrated
Actors :James Joseph Dresnok,Daniel Gordon,Christian Slater,Charles Robert Jenkins
Witness the stories of four US army defectors who abandoned their homeland to seek out a new life in communist North Korea in this fascinating documentary from filmmaker Daniel Gordon. It was August of 1962 that Private First Class James Joseph Dresnok crossed the heavily fortified border from South Korea into the North. Now, more than forty-years later, the last living US Army defector known to reside in North Korea speaks with Gordon in Pyongyang about his life, experiences, and what it means to be a member of the US military who has defected to a communist nation. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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New Visitor Ranting & Critics For Crossing the Line
User Ranting Movie Crossing the Line : 3.6User Percentage For Crossing the Line : 69 %
User Count Like for Crossing the Line : 1,154
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New Review For Movie Crossing the Line
A tale of alienation and adaptation both miraculous and strange, but also abduction both psychological and physical.-Los Angeles Times
Fascinating.
V.A. Musetto-New York Post
You'll be untangling Dresnok's knotty reality long after you leave the theater.
Elizabeth Weitzman-New York Daily News
[The] compelling story and the plentiful high-definition video images of North Korean daily life prove so fascinating that Crossing the Line is riveting.
Matt Zoller Seitz-New York Times
The reflective sequences veer between stylishly effective and drearily overstated.
Michelle Orange-Village Voice
Amazingly, director Daniel Gordon and his crew were allowed to film Dresnok in and around his home in Pyongyang, resulting in a canny portrait of a man as uniquely fit for a life on display as he is blindly willing to kowtow to power.
Mark Holcomb-Time Out New York
Bizarrely fascinating documentary.
Dennis Schwartz-Ozus' World Movie Reviews
There are no absolute answers to these questions, but like a brain-tickling puzzle, Crossing the Line keeps us on our toes and digging for more information.
Robert W. Butler-Kansas City Star
Crossing the Line, like its subject, remains a fascinating and frustrating enigma -- a declassified government report still marred by redacted passages.
Scott Foundas-L.A. Weekly
Crossing The Line lacks the force and power of a strong point of view, but like Gordon's other work about North Korea, it succeeds in revealing what it means for individuals to give themselves over to a collective.
Scott Tobias-AV Club
Director Daniel Gordon hits a goldmine.
Kent Turner-Film-Forward.com
Completely intriguing.
David Noh-Film Journal International
Not exactly compelling stuff, especially if you caught the recent 60 Minutes segment about this traitor which covered substantially the same ground.
Kam Williams-EURWeb
A scary journey into the belly of the beast but a sketchy psychological portrait.
Ed Gonzalez-Slant Magazine
Profile of the last American GI defector in North Korea. Fascinating!
Louis Proyect-rec.arts.movies.reviews
An engrossing look at a rarity, the only four Americans who ever defected to North Korea, with a warm look at the first, James Joseph Dresnok.
Harvey S. Karten-Compuserve
One commendable but far too brief section of the documentary, presents through horrific images and testimony, the gruesome atrocities visited upon the DPRK civilians which exceeded even the US mass carnage against the Vietnamese in that invasion.
Prairie Miller-WBAI Web Radio
The film is so visually stunning it keeps the audience entertained the entire time.
Zack Haddad-Film Threat
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Movie Overview For Crossing the Line
In 1962, a U.S. soldier sent to guard the peace in South Korea deserted his unit, walked across the most heavily fortified area on earth and defected to the Cold War enemy, the communist state of North Korea. He became a star of the North Korean propaganda machine, but then disappeared from the face of the earth. Now, after 45 years, the story of James Dresnok, the last American defector in North Korea, is being told for the first time. Crossing the Line follows Dresnok as he recalls his childhood, desertion, and life in the DPRK.TagLine Crossing the Line


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