In 2001, cartoonist Guy Delisle lived in the capital of North Korea for two months on a work visa for a French film company. In this remarkable graphic novel, Delisle recorded what he was able to see of the culture and lives of one of the last remaining totalitarian communist societies.
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Guy Delisle (born January 19, 1966) is a comic book author from Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. He studied animation at Sheridan College in Oakville, near Toronto, and then worked for the animation studio CinéGroupe in Montreal. He later worked for different studios in Canada, Germany, France, China and North Korea.
His experiences as a supervisor of animation work by studios in Asia were recounted in two graphic novels, Shenzhen (2000) and Pyongyang (2003). The two books, Delisle's most famous work, were first published in French by the independent bande dessinée publisher L'Association. They have been translated into many languages, including English, German, Italian, Polish, Czech and Spanish.
He is married to a Médecins Sans Frontières administrator.[1] With her, he made a trip to Myanmar (Burma) in 2005, which is recounted in Chroniques Birmanes (2007).[2] (translated into English as Burma Chronicles). In the summer of 2009, they completed a one year stay in Jerusalem, Israel, again with Médecins Sans Frontières.[3]
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作者:喂 怎么突然变的这么安静 他们人呐? 朝鲜翻译陪同人员:他们都在看电影呐 电影?全体职工都被叫去看军事电影制片厂的最新影片的放映了... 影片的内容倒也不难猜测 作者:那你呐? 朝鲜翻译陪同人员:我不喜欢国产电影。那些片子都很无聊 这是我在平壤从头到尾的时间中,听到朝鲜人说的最主观的一句话。 而且内容还超乎想象的大胆。 真让我震惊!
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