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Step inside the massive vehicle assembly buildings of North Korea’s Strategic Force and examine the Hwasong-17—the behemoth design that has been dubbed the "Monster Missile" by defense analysts. This full-process documentary explores why experts consider this liquid-fueled giant a game-changer capable of reaching the U.S. East Coast, including New York—analyzing it not just as a propaganda prop, but as a calculated platform designed for heavy payloads and potential multiple warhead (MIRV) delivery. Rather than explaining the chemical engineering of liquid propulsion or the mechanics of stage separation, the film focuses on why this specific range capability matters. We investigate what the sheer size of the Hwasong-17 implies about its ability to overwhelm U.S. missile defenses, what indicators prompted Western intelligence to re-evaluate Pyongyang’s reach, and how capability signals regarding "Manhattan-range" strikes are assessed versus actual guidance accuracy. Through an evidence-based lens, the documentary explains why policymakers and military planners in Washington reacted with alarm to this development. It examines how the theoretical ability to strike New York alters the fundamental debate on deterrence and homeland defense, and what uncertainties remain regarding re-entry vehicle survivability. High-detail visuals and measured pacing help viewers separate state media hyperbole from trajectory data and satellite imagery—clarifying exactly how the threat line moved from the Pacific to the Atlantic, why it surprised observers, and why it matters in today’s global security landscape.