For a long time, recreations in factual programming were just filling a visual gap. The trend these days is, to use recreations instead of conventionally filmed material. How do you get it right? What is the balance between giving audiences a richer visual experience and getting carried away with cool animation, made easier and cheaper with technology? What are the pitfalls? And then of course there are the ethical questions around fabricating a reality that only existed in someone’s imagination. Are there limits? And how wrong can you go?
    …Read more
    Less…
- 
    Korea is the only divided country in the world. Still the tragedy of the first generation of displaced people exists due to the division since the 1950 Korean War. Their…A tribute to my Hometown: Yeomseong-ri 
- 
    
- 
    An animated documentary about a devoted caretaker, her chronically ill husband, and the power of undying love. 11 years after filming a documentary about his family,…Chilly and Milly 
- 
    After fleeing to Argentina, the architect of the Final Solution, Adolf Eichmann, is kidnapped by the Israeli Mossad and brought to Israel to stand trial for his…The Devil’s Confession: The Lost Eichmann… 
- 
    In 1994 actor Jan Linnebjerg charmed the Danish TV viewers as the Christmas Elf Pyrus. More than a third of the Danish population watched the series. Overnight Jan…The Elves testament 
Search for ""