During the 2016-17 academic year, the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies hosted a series of film screenings as part of its weekly Japan Forum Lecture Series.
23 September 2016
Tell the Prime Minister
Followed by Q&A and discussion with Director Eiji Oguma
Tell the Prime Minister is a documentary film on anti-nuclear movement in Japan following the Fukushima nuclear disasters of 2011. Composed of footage of protests taken by ordinary citizens and uploaded to the internet, the film includes interviews with individuals including former Prime Minister Naoto Kan, a hospital worker, a young entrepreneur, a self-proclaimed anarchist, and shop clerk, an illustrator, a Fukushima evacuee, and a Dutch businessperson.
21-22 October 2016
Tsukiji Wonderland
Followed by Q&A and discussion with Director Naotarō Endō and Producers Maiko Teshima and Kazuha Okuda, featuring Theodore Bestor
Tokyo’s Tsukiji market, the largest wholesale fish market on the planet, is on the verge of being relocated. What has made a tired, gritty 80-year-old complex in the heart of Tokyo not simply a commercial hub but a cultural arbiter of contemporary Japanese cuisine? The documentary provides a rich and sustaining portrait of Tsukiji. Spend a day with the buyers, sellers, chefs, local residents, and visitors who help make a fish market central to a city’s sense of identity at a moment when the market’s very future is in flux.
4 November 2016
Okinawa: The Afterburn
Followed by Q&A and discussion with Director John Junkerman
A major hit in Japan since its release in June 2015, on the 70th anniversary of the Battle of Okinawa, Okinawa: The Afterburn depicts the Battle through the eyes of Japanese and American soldiers who fought each other on the same battlefields, along with Okinawa civilians who were swept up in the fighting, and the complex postwar fate of Okinawa, an island that has had to live side-by-side with an extensive array of U.S. bases, and the related crimes, accidents, and pollution they have caused, while coexisting, on a personal level, with the occupying soldiers.
10 March 2017
Voices from the Waves (Nami no Koe)
Followed by Q&A and discussion with Director Ryusuke Hamaguchi, RIJS Visiting Artist in Residence
From 2011 to 2013, Ryusuke Hamaguchi and Ko Sakai conducted a series of conversations with residents in the Tohoku region of Japan, an area heavily hit by both the earthquake and tsunami of March 2011. Their research resulted in three films, the second of which was Voices from the Waves (Nami no Koe, 2013). Featuring interviews with residents from the Tohoku region, this documentary explores how a single event impacts many lives and creates similar but unique pieces of storytelling.