Choe began working at the
Korea Film Studio, first as a deputy film director in 1955 and then as an independent director. He became the head of the studio in 1956 at the age of just 22. As a filmmaker, he was largely self-taught but aspiring. In addition to his formal education in arts, he now had much experience with the
Stalinist model of making films in particular. Choe's breakthrough was the 1963 film
A Garden Zinnia. In 1968,
Kim Jong Il, the country's future leader, took control of the country's film industry. Kim lacked experience in the field and so he teamed up with Choe, who was much experienced by this time and was "arguably the single North Korean most knowledgeable about film, other than Kim". Choe became Kim's closest partner in his activities related to film; his "film tutor". Their collaborations became immensely popular, Choe directing and Kim producing films that would become known as "
Immortal Classics" and
People's Prize winners. The first film Choe and Kim made together was
Sea of Blood (1968), followed by
Five Guerilla Brothers the same year. By the end of the decade, Choe had been appointed as a supervisor of the film industry section of the
Propaganda and Agitation Department of the ruling
Workers' Party of Korea. in
Pyongyang, a recurring propaganda spectacle developed by Choe In 1972, Choe and Kim released
The Flower Girl, The film augmented Choe's position as Kim's close confidant, making him responsible for propaganda spectacles beyond film. Choe was promoted as the vice director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department and elected a member of parliament in the
fifth Supreme People's Assembly. Choe was now in charge of events like
Day of the Sun celebrations and
Liberation Day marches. He developed
mass games that would evolve into the
Arirang Festival, the organizing of which he is still overseeing. Choe would also give artistic guidance to
Korean revolutionary operas and plays. For instance, he had directed an operatic adaption of
Sea of Blood in 1971. Choe and Kim's relationship became a close and long one. Choe would be personally involved in the making of many more films and supervising the production of others, such as multi-part
The Star of Korea (1980–1987).
Abduction of Shin Sang-ok and Choi Eun-hee Choe Ik-gyu played a role in the abduction of
Shin Sang-ok and
Choi Eun-hee, a famous South Korean director-actress couple. In a secret tape recorded by Shin and Choi, Kim Jong Il is heard confiding to the couple that he decided to kidnap them on the advice of Choe who considered Shin the best director of South Korea. After years of separation, when Shin and Choi were re-united by their captor, Kim Jong Il, on 6 March 1983, Choe was present. He would work with Shin from that point on to direct movies for Kim Jong Il. He would pass on messages between Kim, Shin and Choi; the latter two rarely met Kim in person. First, Choe accompanied Shin and Choi on a trip from Pyongyang to Moscow,
East Germany,
Hungary,
Czechoslovakia, and
Yugoslavia. The purpose of the trip was to scout for locations for the first film Shin had agreed to make for Kim Jong Il:
An Emissary of No Return. Choe was discontent with the project. He had been an acclaimed film director in his own right, but now he had to mind his South Korean counterpart. Both Shin and Choi disliked Choe. Choe resorted to criticizing Shin's directing in front of the crew. Shin gained back control of the project by threatening to report to Kim Jong Il about Choe's behavior. The film was finished and would be played at the
London Film Festival and Shin was to attend. Shin contemplated escaping there, but Choe and an entourage of bodyguards had traveled to London in advance. After Shin and Choi had managed to escape in
Vienna, Choe was demoted from his position in the Propaganda and Agitation Department. He was sent into the countryside, his exact whereabouts unknown for years.
Return to politics , an art Choe has been involved in as a director and cultural administrator Choe Ik-gyu was allowed to return as the vice director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in 1988. He assumed full control of the theater and operatic fields. That year, he was involved in making
The Life of Chunhyang, an acclaimed
folk opera. Choe guided performers "as if he were a stage director". Beginning with the early 1990s, Choe – credited under his pseudonym Choe Sang-geun – produced
The Nation and Destiny. Choe produced, directed and wrote scenarios throughout the production of the 50-part film series, which Kim Jong Il considered the last work made under his personal guidance. Choe briefly fell out of public life in 1993 when he was dismissed from his Propaganda and Agitation Department post again. Even during this period, Kim Jong Il allowed him to travel to Germany to treat his health problems, which reflects the amount of trust Kim had in Choe. All in all, Choe has been dismissed four times from the Propaganda and Agitation Department. Choe became the
Minister of Culture in September 2003 but retired temporarily some two years later because of
diabetes and other chronic health issues. representing Electoral District#73. He finally became the head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in 2009. As the director of the Department, Choe was one of North Korea's propaganda chiefs. He was replaced by
Kang Nung-su in early February 2010 for unknown reasons. Choe was often seen accompanying Kim Jong Il on formal occasions until
the latter's death in 2011. When traveling outside North Korea, Choe uses the name Choe Sang-geun. Such was the case for instance when he visited
Seoul in South Korea in 2000 in the capacity of the counsel to the
National Orchestra of North Korea.
Succession of Kim Jong Un Choe was among those who vouched for the succession of
Kim Jong Un at a time when his ascension to power remained uncertain. In addition to Kim Jong Il, Choe would aid Kim's third wife
Ko Yong Hui, and
Jang Song-thaek. Paul Fischer, the author of
A Kim Jong Il Production, assesses that "[t]he modern North Korean state, which is a production, a display performance of its own, owes as much to Choe Ik-Gyu's taste and talents as it does to Kim Jong Il." ==Filmography==