“I really think that one day my son will find me. It may be an insane thought, but I live for it.”
- Seung-hee Kim (pseudonym), Birth Mother
Misun Park has been working as a producer, director, writer and cinematographer for the past ten years. Her films focus on various social issues, and she works on independent documentaries for Korean television. She recently produced and shot a documentary series about children and traveled to Bolivia to document children working in silver mines, child monks in Bhutan and children in Brazil.
Her cinematography credits include, among many others: Children Under Manhole (1998), Little Giants in Icerink (2001, Awarded by the Broadcasting Producers Association of Korea), Going to Sarawak - Tropical Forests Disappearing (2002, joint production with the Environmentalists Association), One Hundred Year Life (2005), and Dreaming of Another Family (2005).
She has been invited to several film festivals, including the Pusan International Film Festival and Taiwan International Documentary Film Festival.
Rev. Do Hyun Kim
Tammy Chu
Anthony Gilmore
Misun Park
Jessica Windt
Kim Stoker
Mett Pok