The second part focuses on 1 May International Workers' Day celebrations, and shows peasants rejoicing at land redistribution programs and marching together.
The protests were brutally suppressed by the Japanese, resulting in thousands of deaths, and were ultimately unsuccessful in the short term.
[5] After the end of World War II in 1945, Kim Il Sung became leader of the Soviet-backed Provisional People's Committee of North Korea in February 1946.
[6] Shortly afterwards, the North Korean government encouraged the creation of films that forwarded ideas of anti-imperialism, anti-feudalism, and democracy.
He started a film studio in a former sock factory in the Taedong County area of Pyongyang, and requested support for his work from Kim Chang-man (김창만), the head of propaganda for the Workers' Party of North Korea.
Jeong Jun-chae then played a pivotal role in the creation of some of North Korea's earliest films, including Our Construction.