
1996
They're called bar women, hostesses, or sex workers and "western princesses." They come from poor families, struggling to earn a decent wage, only to be forced into the world's oldest profession. They're the women who work in the camptowns that surround U.S. military bases in South Korea. In 40 years, over a million women have worked in Korea's military sex industry, but their existence has never been officially acknowledged by either government. In The Women Outside, a film by J.T. Orinne Takagi and Hye Jung Park, some of these women bravely speak out about their lives for the first time. The film raises provocative questions about military policy, economic survival, and the role of women in global geopolitics

No Defense

Shusenjo: The Main Battleground of the Comfort Women Issue

Una identidad en absurdo Vol. 1

There Never Was an Arrow

Russians at War

UFO Diaries

Served Like a Girl

My name is KIM Bok-dong

Buy Bye Beauty

Last Temptation in Thailand

Conversations with Turiansky

WWIII

The Murmuring

Whore

The Faces of North Korea

The Air Force Story

Happy Endings?

Lilja 4 real

Muerte al invasor

My Own Breathing