May 9, 2018 This article is more than 2 years old.

Tourists are flocking to a replica of Korea’s Truce Village to recreate the historic handshake between South Korean president Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

EPA/Korea Summit Press Pool The original.

The two leaders shook hands last month during the inter-Korean summit. Visitors near Seoul can reenact the move in a much less tense environment.

The replica is located in a movie set close to the South Korean capital. It was built for the blockbuster “JSA: Joint Security Area,” which was released in 2000. The film is based off the book “DMZ” and follows an investigation of two North Korean soldiers killed in the Korean Demilitarized Zone.

Though there’s less at stake than in the film or the actual village, visitors must still hurry if they want to get their own handshake photo. The replica is reportedly being torn down this month, as the movie studio will be relocating to Busan.

Reuters/Kwak Sung-Kyung Two boys shake hands at the replica of the truce village of Panmunjom at a movie studio in Namyangju, South Korea.

Reuters/Kwak Sung-Kyung A woman and a girl shake hands over a replica of the barrier seperating North and South Korea