9 Films We Definitely Need To Hide From Kim Jong Un

By Michael Thompson /

3. 1984

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The world of George Orwell's 1984 has to be one of the darkest, most depressing ever depicted. The sense of oppression is terrible and the ending, either way you read it, extremely sad. It kind of reminds you of everything you've read about living in Russia during the 1920s-30s or more recently North Korea. Why it seems to be almost every communist dictator's dream to make their people suffer will never make any economical or military sense, but all reports suggest Kim Jong-Un has followed faithfully in his father's footsteps by committing numerous crimes against humanity. If he hasn't seen this film yet, and there's a good chance he has, the CIA should work to make sure he never does. Okay, they've probably got better things to do, but you can see the sick little wheels turning inside the malevolent dictator's head as he witnesses the total control Big Brother has over the people in England. 1984, the same year of his birth, has to be an example of Kim Jong-Un's ultimate desire for how the world should be ran.