[KineJapan] Tsunami and heartwake film versions of Kanto daijinsai

BERRY Paul hakutaku at kansaigaidai.ac.jp
Tue Apr 8 03:29:44 EDT 2014


Concerning cinema versions of the Kanto daijinsai, I think there are many. Two popular ones are Jissoji Akio's Tokyo: The Last Megalopolis (帝都物語, Teito Monogatari, 1988 that has all kinds of detailed models of the city begin destroyed in a fantasy narrative. There is also Fukusaku Kinji's retelling of Yosano Akiko's life in Hana no ran 華の乱 also from 1988 that ends with the chaos of the earthquake. I think there are many more. 
It is interesting to reflect on the varied treatments like this.
Paul Berry
Kyoto


----- Original Message -----
From: Ryan Cook <ryancook at fas.harvard.edu>
To: Japanese Cinema Discussion Forum <kinejapan at lists.service.ohio-state.edu>
Sent: Tue, 08 Apr 2014 08:58:12 +0900 (JST)
Subject: Re: [KineJapan] Tsunami and heartwake 2011 Av coverage


Jim,

This was an issue that came up at times at the Berkeley symposium and was a theme in my own paper which situated 3/11 fiction films in relation to atomic bomb and hibakusha films.  I personally came across an observation that the Kanto and Hanshin earthquakes had received surprisingly little attention from fiction/narrative filmmakers.  I'm not quite comfortable making that claim myself because I haven't followed up on it very much, but Jonathan Abel gave a paper at Berkeley in which he cited an interesting quote from an essay by Yumeno Kyusaku written shortly after the 1923 earthquake.  Yumeno had interviewed an official responsible for film censorship who noted that there had been a lack of screenplays dealing with the disaster submitted for official approval at the time.  The conclusion was that screenwriters had exercised self-restraint at least in the historical moment.  Self-restraint (jishuku) has also been a theme since 3/11, but evidently not to the point of altogeth
 
 er preventing films from being made.

The Wind Rises contains a dramatic depiction of the Kanto earthquake, as someone else just mentioned.  That's interesting in that it is a depiction of the earthquake from a post-3/11 vantage point (at least the film was released in 2013... I don't know when production began), and in that sense it is also a "3/11 film."  Miyazaki of course has publicly come out against nuclear energy, and it seems reasonable to imagine a subtext in all the talk of Japan "exploding" and the persistence of the wind motif in the film, the wind being as ambivalent as the dream of flight, lifting beautiful things into the air, but also spreading fires and poisonous things.  Wakamatsu Koji was reportedly planning an adaptation of the nuclear fallout graphic novel "When the Wind Blows" before his death.  Off the top of my head, I can't think of other dramatic representations of the 1923 earthquake in film, though I'm probably overlooking important examples.

Ryan


________________________________________
From: kinejapan-bounces+ryancook=fas.harvard.edu at lists.service.ohio-state.edu [kinejapan-bounces+ryancook=fas.harvard.edu at lists.service.ohio-state.edu] on behalf of Jim Harper [jimharper666 at yahoo.co.uk]
Sent: Monday, April 07, 2014 5:34 AM
To: Japanese Cinema Discussion Forum
Subject: Re: [KineJapan] Tsunami and heartwake 2011 Av coverage

Forgive me butting in here, but I'm curious about a couple of things.

a) Has much been written about the presentation and portrayal of disaster in Japanese cinema in general, prior to 3/11?

b) Have specific disasters- like the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 or the 1995 Kobe Earthquake- been heavily represented in contemporary film, also prior to 3/11?

Can anyone help? Just a couple of brief answers would be very much appreciated. Thank you!

Jim Harper.

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