Thứ Ba, 12 tháng 8, 2014

Sửng sốt nhìn cuộc sống văn minh ở Bình Nhưỡng

Tham khảo hữu ích: Sửng sốt nhìn cuộc sống ken kín xe máy ở Hà Nội
Sửng sốt nhìn cuộc sống văn minh và tươi đẹp ở Bình Nhưỡng
Người phương Tây thường hình dung Triều Tiên là một quốc gia ảm đạm, thiếu đói và vắng bóng các mặt hàng xa xỉ hiện đại. Nhắc đến Triều Tiên, không ít người nghĩ ngay đến một hệ thống luật pháp hà khắc. Tuy nhiên, theo tạp chí TIME, các nhà sản xuất video JT Singh và Rob Whitworth đã cung cấp những hình ảnh rất chân thực, vui vẻ và sống động về cuộc sống của người dân thủ đô Triều Tiên. Trong một chuyến thăm, họ đã dựng được một đoạn phim tua nhanh thời gian về con người và cảnh vật ở thành phố này.
JT Singh và Rob Whitworth cho biết họ có người đi kèm ở bất cứ nơi đâu họ đến. Hai người cũng phải tránh xa "các công trường xây dựng, các địa điểm chưa phát triển và các quân nhân" như được yêu cầu.
http://vietnamnet.vn/vn/quoc-te/191832/bat-ngo-voi-doi-thuc-o-binh-nhuong-qua-video-tua-nhanh.html

Ajoutée le 8 août 2014

“Enter Pyongyang” is another stunning collaboration between city-­branding pioneer JT Singh and flow-motion videographer Rob Whitworth. Blending time-lapse photography, acceleration and slow motion, HD and digital animation, they have produced a cutting‐edge panorama of a city hardly known, but one emerging on the visitor’s landscape as North Korea’s opening unfolds.
North Korea was the last country seemingly immune to change—but no longer. Recent years have witnessed mobile phone penetration, a surge in tourists, and even a marathon. Numerous special economic zones have been launched in cooperation with China, Russia, and South Korea, with railways planned linking all countries in the region. “Enter Pyongyang” captures not just the city, but this dynamism and sense of potential.
This video is the single most significant multi-­media contribution to transcending clichés about North Korea as a society defined by reclusiveness and destitution. To travel there is to witness a proud civilization, though one caught in a Cold War time-warp. Korean cultural traditions are meticulously preserved and displayed in authentic richness. Anyone who has witnessed the awe-inspiring Mass Games knows that, with great sacrifice, North Koreans can pull off a performance unparalleled in its precision.
“Enter Pyongyang” captures the reality of North Korean citizens as earnest and humane, not automatons. The infamous traffic ladies and subway guards stand stiff and sentinel—but today they share a smile too. The more North Koreans one meets, the more one sees an organic society that wants to be a normal country. If you travel there not to judge but to appreciate, you will come away with a better understanding of how challenging national transformation can be.
"Enter Pyongyang" is above all an invitation to explore. Few places in the world have been as hermetically sealed as North Korea, but Koryo Tours has made it possible not just to see North Korea but to engage with it in ways that were impossible until very recently. This is a window of opportunity not to be missed. If Pyongyang is no longer off limits, no place is.
--Foreword by Dr. Parag Khanna, Director, Hybrid Reality
Koryo Group: The Koryo team brought a wealth of valuable knowledge and expertise to this project. Thanks to their extensive experience in running tourism and cultural engagement projects in North Korea since 1993, we were able to get unprecedented access in Pyongyang. We are thankful to the Koryo team and their Korean partners for an unforgettable experience.
FAQs
-How were you guys allowed to film in Pyongyang?
This project was produced in conjunction with Koryo Tours, the leading North Korea travel specialist. Vicky Mohieddeen of Koryo Tours was with us throughout the shoot.
-Were there restrictions on what was allowed to be filmed?
We were closely assisted by two guides from the National Tourism Administration, who helped us gain special access to locations and made sure that we followed all the rules. As is standard for all foreign visitors to the country, we were not allowed to shoot any construction sites, undeveloped locations or military personnel. Other than that we were given relatively free reign.
-Isn’t this all fake? You don’t see the real North Korea.
The average visitor to Pyongyang is likely to be surprised by the scenes they encounter and are especially surprised about how clean and orderly the city actually is. Indeed, people living in Pyongyang and other major cities enjoy a higher quality of life than those in other parts of the county.
-Are people allowed to travel to North Korea?
Yes, despite what the majority of people think, it is possible to visit North Korea as a tourist. North Korea does not release official data on the number of Western tourists it receives, but estimates range from 4,000 to 6,000 per year. Most of the foreign tourists are from Mainland China, estimated in the tens of thousands annually.
-Were you paid to make this film?
We volunteered for this project with no pay at all. All other travel expenses for the 6 day trip were covered by Koryo Tours.
-Does this film support the DPRK government?
"Enter Pyongyang" is an observational film. At no point did Koryo Tours or we have to pretend to be supporters of the DPRK Government or their philosophy in order to be granted permission to shoot this film. Amazingly, we were given complete editorial control in the making of this piece.
Tom Day (Music)
Website: tomday.me
Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/tomday
JT Singh
Website: jtsingh.com/
Facebook: facebook.com/jtssingh
Twitter: twitter.com/jtssingh
Rob Whitworth
Website: robwhitworth.co.uk/
Facebook: facebook.com/RobWhitworthPhotography
Twitter: twitter.com/kwhi02
Koryo Tours
Website: koryogroup.com
Facebook: facebook.com/koryotours
Twitter: twitter.com/koryotours
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_6UxcLMdWV8



Ajoutée le 10 août 2014

Video producers JT Singh and Rob Whitworth were given permission to film in North Korea's capital if they avoided "construction sites, undeveloped locations or military personnel"

To much of the outside world, North Korea is a mystery. Little information about North Koreans’ daily lives makes it out of the country, partially because of its citizens disconnectedness and stringent restrictions on foreign visitors to the country. Westerners are accustomed to a gloomy narrative about the country, and famine, electricity shortages, North Korea’s draconian legal system and scarcity of modern luxuries loom large in outsiders’ imaginations.

But video producers JT Singh and Rob Whitworth show North Korea’s capital, Pyongyang in a cheerier light. In a state-sponsored visit, the pair created extensive footage of the city to create a time-lapse video of its people and sights. The two were escorted everywhere they went and were “not allowed to shoot any construction sites, undeveloped locations or military personnel.”

Their footage is detailed and intimate, but the obvious restrictions the pair had in creating the video make for a revealing and strange look at the enigmatic capital

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JYsjzlheS34

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