Friday, October 4, 2013

In this photo taken Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011, performers wait to film a show at a period film set in Pyongyang, North Korea. An international film festival opens Thursday, Sept. 20 in the unlikeliest of places: North Korea. Held every two years, the Pyongyang International Film Festival is the only time North Koreans get to see a wide array of foreign films on the big screen. Photo: Ng

Kim Sae-Ron @ 2011 BIFF (photo taken by AsianWiki CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)- 2010 Korean film, The Man From
Kim Sae-Ron @ 2011 BIFF  (photo taken by AsianWiki CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)- 2010 Korean film, The Man From
Korean
Korean
South Korean actor Seo-Jin Lee (right) pauses for photos with Thai actor Rattapoom "Film" Tokongsup while building at the 2009 Carter Work Project in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Photos by Habitat for Humanity/Andy Nelson. www.FoxValleyHabi... Donate
South Korean actor Seo-Jin Lee (right) pauses for photos with Thai actor Rattapoom "Film" Tokongsup while building at the 2009 Carter Work Project in Chiang Mai, Thailand.  Photos by Habitat for Humanity/Andy Nelson. www.FoxValleyHabi...  Donate
In this photo taken Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011, performers wait to film a show at a period film set in Pyongyang, North Korea. An international film festival opens Thursday, Sept. 20 in the unlikeliest of places: North Korea. Held every two years, the Pyongyang International Film Festival is the only time North Koreans get to see a wide array of foreign films on the big screen. Photo: Ng
In this photo taken Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011, performers wait to film a show at a period film set in Pyongyang, North Korea. An international film festival opens Thursday, Sept. 20 in the unlikeliest of places: North Korea. Held every two years, the Pyongyang International Film Festival is the only time North Koreans get to see a wide array of foreign films on the big screen. Photo: Ng
Korean photographer Seung Hoon Park takes hundreds of photos of the same location using 16mm film and a huge tripod camera then weaves them together creating contemporary mosaics of tiny film strips.
Korean photographer Seung Hoon Park takes hundreds of photos of the same location using 16mm film and a huge tripod camera then weaves them together creating contemporary mosaics of tiny film strips.

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