What is it about?
A rare TV documentary by one of Japan's acclaimed directors that looks at the uneasy relationship Japan, the nation, and the Japanese people have with the unfinished business of the Pacific War and Japanese aggression in Southeast Asia.
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Why is it important?
The paper introduces and puts into context three unheralded documentaries made by Imamura Shōhei during the time he turned his back on commercial film making.
Perspectives
I am a big fan of Imamura Shōhei. The enfant terrible of Japanese cinema in the 1960s, his work is bold, provocative and fresh in equal measures. Although shot on a very tight budget, all three documentaries are an example of Imamura’s quest to combine the world of the reality – the work associated with documentary film making – with art of telling a ripper yarn.
Bill Mihalopoulos
University of Central Lancashire
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This page is a summary of: The never-ending Pacific War: Imamura Shōhei and the ruse of memory, Japan Forum, April 2018, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/09555803.2018.1442363.
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