Story by Lehan Winifred Ramsay
Last night in my quest for entertainment I came across a movie online called Nihon Chinbotsu (Sinking of Japan) and watched it in some amazement. Whoever has posted it online appears to have found a “sign” that it foretells the earthquake and tsunami from last year. But I was just shocked to realize that I had no idea of something that probably affected so many people, in an experience I shared.
I really know nothing of Japan, my twenty years has not supplied me with the tools to read the culture in any depth. I don’t know what’s cool, what’s new, what’s big. So it doesn’t surprise me that I never heard of this film before. Even though it came from a bestselling book, is the second movie version since 1973, has pulled in $43 million in the box office since it opened in 2006, has some of the most desirable celebrity talent in its lineup, has had parodies made of it. I think the movie I watched just before it was Rollerball, so there was nothing at all insightful about my stumbling across it.
It’s a movie about the almost complete downfall of Japan, which falls victim to a series of natural disasters. The plate on which the islands rest is getting sucked down, and the islands experience a string of horrific disasters, calculated to entirely submerge them in less than a year. The people who are not killed are being shipped off to foreign countries, all of which are reluctant to take them, to spend the rest of their lives, and the remaining people are going to die terrible deaths. Only the vision of one scientist can save them.
So I watched as town after town exploded and washed away, and eventually I saw the giant wave encompass the red brick warehouses and the old ship crane of Hakodate. Bricks flying everywhere, people all washed away. And I thought: oh my god, how many people in Hakodate were standing braced in the doorways of their houses on March 11 last year, thinking of that scene. Because after an earthquake in a coastal town people always have to take action against a possible tsunami. How many of the shop owners in those red brick warehouses, in that 30 minute or so wait for the wave that did hit, were thinking of that movie? How many people in Tokyo, when the power went out and the trains shut down and the earth moved, thought about those skyscrapers crumbling. And in the regions that didn’t have time for thinking, how many recognized what was happening?
Imagine yourself, having watched this film, turning on the television to the kind of live footage we saw last year. And in the days and months after, as the battle with the nuclear power stations continued, like a kind of cultural deja-vu.
What must people have been thinking?
If Japan is so despondent about it all, why don’t we see riots or upheavals? Is it not in the character of the Japanese people to complain publicly? Good form and manners at all times!
Politeness and not wishing to upset others was always a Japanese quality to be admired. Even so, how long can that be allowed to continue.
On the other hand, perhaps all is well and very bearable. People have food and roof over the heads, a lot more than those in America where homelessness and despair is quite bad.
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I saw on a news broadcast last night Gerard the reaction of the anti nuke protestors who I have known to be quite strong in my perception compared with here, Gerard. Not forgetting. I was considering the impact on the Japanese of shock.
It is sad in the States, Gerard, disasters as well are wholescale and unremitting as well as the economic morass. The comparison doesn’t make sense to me regardless. People are, indeed, homeless and have lost their families in a mass catastrophe in Japan.. What can you be thinking.
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I gather you are suggesting it is a social norm to be ‘orderly’.
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Myself I don’t know that I would be past the shock.
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Yes. I remember you folk remarking on how gloomy I was back in April of last year. And I knew nothing, only what I was hearing on the television. And things were so much worse than I knew!
Now, little snippets are emerging of what was going on at that time. Things like: the power company deciding to totally evacuate the nuclear power plant. The Prime Minister heard about it and rushed to the company and berated them, telling them that they could not evacuate. It’s quite difficult to tell for sure, but the impression I have is that had the government followed it’s own protocol, Tokyo SHOULD have been evacuated. Half of Japan should have been evacuated. It’s not necessarily the case that the reactors have been stabilized. But anyway, why should we worry about 50 or so nuclear reactors ringing this unstable little group of islands which you might consider as a whole string of explosives drilled into the ground ready to go off at any time and puncture the earth’s plate this country is sitting on… Really, what we have to worry about is the phenomenal power of the nuclear industry which is building and planning more and more reactors in unstable places every day.
We should consider something like this movie. It resonates with millions of people in a way that may have considerable impact. Tomorrow the last functioning nuclear reactor is shutting down for inspection. But they could be starting them up again very quickly if they can get the consensus of the people. Consider. That radiation has not gone away, even if the attention has. We’re all soaking in it. That makes – three big ones, that we know of? Chernobyl, 3-mile Island, Fukushima? The governments simply raise the acceptable rate of radiation in the food and air. The country was engulfed in catastrophe a year ago and was “restored” by the government. Now, are those people going to accept that this technology is appropriate? I don’t know, do you? Watch the movie, let me know.
By the way, Hakodate gets it just after the 1 hour mark. Those brick warehouses were where the Starbucks was. I’d have been spending my afternoons there, if I’d been rich enough!
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There’s a part in the movie where the Prime Minister talks about an idea that has come from several people he has consulted. To do NOTHING, to die with the country. It’s not what he chooses to do, but he wishes he could. If you remember, that’s what I wrote about, on The Drum. The people here that I’ve spoken to really, really wish that they didn’t have to choose, between safety and prosperity. Because they know if they choose safety, they will be the losers economically.
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I believe that a ‘twin towers gets attacked by big aeroplanes’ was being discussed just prior to the 11th September attack.
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Looking at the title, I conclude that Nihon means Japan, and Chinbotsu equals Drowning .We watched the Story of Steve Job, most interesting….I was impressed to find out that good design was very important to him, both the usability and design..
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Great comment. I thought something like that watching the movie Volcano having lived in New Zealand, but I didn’t translate it to the population, only to my own possible response.
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I’m going to watch Lion King for some light weight downtime tonight.
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I watched The Lion King last night. I don’t know the script would have been easy for an Australian child to follow, loved the animation, thought it was gruesome in parts but so what it didn’t dwell and isn’t real life gruesome. The DVD had a Bonus feature that presents the making of it from the conception of the idea to the final outcome.
The opening of Nihon Chinbotsu is playing as I write this Lehan and I see it is sub-titled. I will make time to watch it as soon as I am able, looking forward to it if that is the word. I think I will recognise Hakodate as I went online to Google Maps before to familiarise myself with where you lived then.
PS: not me I did not say last year that you were gloomy. I remember reading the dialogue via my email, probably still have it stashed in an archive, I did not idenitfy with it.
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Sandshoe, Lion King is of course not a nature film, but I have to miss some wonderful documentaries as I can’t bear to watch some big bad animal attacking little baby animals that their mother has nursed carefully to a certain stage of a little bit independence……
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It was hard going The Lion King helvi, for that area of emotion aside the diffifculties I perceived in the script that I truthfully thought might be better restricted to a kind of gangster spoof on language, surely children do not talk like that.
I supposei you saw ‘Milo and Otis’ helvi. There was a scene that traumatised me in it but partic because a child in the row of adults and children in front of me opened her mouth and brought the house down with an unearthly scream, and sobbed her heart out. 😦
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You’re right, shoe. Voice pointed it out. And she was right.
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Whether Voice would be thought right or wrong by whomsoever and you are the person Lehan ultimately privvy to what your outlook was at the time, and its expression, all of us is not a collective of thought or response is the point I would like to clarify. I have no right or wrong postulation in the reference I make, which is that I didn’t take that reference on board and don’t. I was wanting to differentiate individuality in the light I am a piglet nevertheless.I fear being bundled. 🙂
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good point.
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I remind you Lehan to prod Mike Jones to send your details on to me so I can post this parcel that has been travelling forth and back for so long now and around my living room. 🙂
Last night btw I wrote a paper on demand (me of myself) and that I emailed voluntarily to a consultation process on local governance, and it’s been accepted, a stroke or three before midnight, mmhmm, yesmmm, funny isn’t it, we don’t walk away from what we do too too easily. 🙂
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I, of course ,meant we don’t walk away too easily, rather than that we do what we ‘do’ easily. Habit is a tricky entity. 🙂
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