24 Outstanding FILMography Pictures By Christopher Moloney
Peter Pizagalli
Published
10/27/2014
In this unique style, Christopher has already recreated film scenes from New York City, Los Angeles, Toronto, Chicago, Orlando, Rome, Naples, Ischia or Ho Chi Minh City. Without further banter, here are 24 outstanding FILMography pictures by Christopher Moloney
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1.
Midnight Cowboy, directed by John Schlesinger 1969 -
2.
Lulu on the Bridge, directed by author Paul Auster 1998 -
3.
Resident Evil, directed by Paul W. S. Anderson 2002 -
4.
The Talented Mr. Ripley, directed by Anthony Minghella 1999 -
5.
Lon: The Professional, directed by Luc Besson 1994 -
6.
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, directed by Edgar Wright 2010 -
7.
The Fisher King, directed by Terry Gilliam 1991 -
8.
Baby Mama, directed by Michael McCullers 2008 -
9.
Die Hard with a Vengeance, directed by John McTiernan 1995 -
10.
Catch Me If You Can, directed by Steven Spielberg 2002 -
11.
Good Will Hunting, directed by Gus Van Sant 1997 -
12.
Rocky, directed by John G. Avildsen 1976 -
13.
Men in Black 2, directed by Barry Sonnenfeld 2002 -
14.
Marathon Man, directed by John Schlesinger 1976 -
15.
Elf, directed by Jon Favreau 2003 -
16.
Roman Holiday, directed by William Wyler 1953 -
17.
Doctor Who The Angels Take Manhattan, directed by Nick Hurran 2012 -
18.
20The Dark Knight Rises, directed by Jonathan Nolan 2012 -
19.
Little Manhattan, directed by Mark Levin and Jennifer Flackett 2005 -
20.
Breakfast at Tiffany's, directed by Blake Edwards 1961 -
21.
The Manchurian Candidate, directed by John Frankenheimer 1962 -
22.
The Avengers, directed by Joss Whedon 2012 -
23.
Home Alone 2 Lost in New York, directed by Chris Columbus 1992 -
24.
Ghost, directed by Jerry Zucker 1990
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If you haven´t heard of FILMography yet,here is this new, curious thing. FILMography is an ongoing art project by Canadian photographer Christopher Moloney. As the name suggests, it has something to do with two things – film and photography. What Christopher does in reality is he takes printed pictures from movies, and recreates them with new photos of the same, present-day, background. He basically creates pictures of old pictures in the same but contemporary setting and it is really cool to see how little the places have changed over the years, still perfectly matching those black and white photos from legendary movies.
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