Seoul court rejects request to ban airing of Netflix documentary 'The Echoes of Survivors'
A Seoul court has rejected an application for injunction to ban the airing of the Netflix documentary “The Echoes of Survivors: Inside Korea’s Tragedies,” which is set to premiere on Aug. 15.
On Aug. 12, the Seoul Western District Court dismissed the request filed by the Christian Gospel Mission (JMS) against Netflix and Korean channel MBC. JMS is the subject of the documentary.
The court ruled, "Based solely on the materials submitted so far, it is not possible to conclude that the footage contains content consistent with the denomination's claims or constitutes false information."
JMS previously argued that "the production team is raising false allegations and defaming JMS members and the denomination."
“The Echoes of Survivors: Inside Korea’s Tragedies” is the sequel to the 2023 Netflix documentary “In the Name of God: A Holy Betrayal.”
According to Netflix, the new documentary “brings forward the survivors behind Korea’s most devastating tragedies and what it means to keep living after everything changes.”
“Expanding on the investigative foundation of Season 1, The Echoes of Survivors revisits the JMS case with new testimony and context, while uncovering three additional tragedies that have left lasting scars on the nation’s collective memory. Through intimate interviews, rare archival footage, and a survivor-centered lens, the series explores not just the events themselves, but the enduring strength of those who lived through them,” according to the streaming platform.
The documentary focuses on religious cults in South Korea.