May • 2020
Thomas delivered beautiful footage. He was very communicative, thorough, and professional. Recommend his work.
Bangkok, Thailand
4 reviews$700 - $1500 / Day
My name is Thomas Cristofoletti, and I am an Italian documentary filmmaker and photographer based between Bangkok (Thailand) and Phnom Penh (Cambodia). Since 2012, I have been working on multiple humanitarian video and photography projects across Asia, Central America and Europe, collaborating with major media outlets such as The New York Times, Bloomberg, The Guardian, and the South China Morning Post and international NGOs such as USAID, UNICEF, WWF. I'm currently shooting with Sony FX-6 - A7sIII + DJI Mavic 2 Pro + DJI Mini 4 Pro
May • 2020
Thomas delivered beautiful footage. He was very communicative, thorough, and professional. Recommend his work.
March • 2022
Thomas was great to work with, really communicative and the footage is excellent!
Microfinance, once hailed as a miracle cure for poverty, has become a lending system run amok –– and institutions that could help fix it are feeding the frenzy.
Mai Somnang is proud to be a lotus farmer making sustainable face masks from the flower’s stems in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. Before the Covid-19 pandemic, the social enterprise Samatoa produced natural textiles with kapok, banana and lotus. Now it's facing a high demand for face masks made out of lotus fiber. The masks are exported to the U.S., Australia and France.
Jesse Schoberg, 41, relocated to Bangkok, Thailand at the beginning of 2022. He has been living and working abroad since 2008. He currently makes about $230,000 a year as the co-founder and CEO of a blogging software company.
"Dynamite" Douglas Latchford was known for buying and selling the beautiful, intricate statues that were built into Cambodia's sacred temples. Now the country is trying to get them back.
At 8pm on Monday, July 23 2018, a susidiary dam on the Xe Pian Xe Namnoy hydropower complex in southern Laos burst. At least 39 people are dead and 97 people are still missing. Weeks after the survivors are recounting the horror of that day.
The Mekong River ecosystem is on the verge of collapse due to the accumulative effects of climate change. Hydropower dams, drought and human-made activities such as deforestation and sand mining have also caused water levels to drop to their lowest in more than 60 years.
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