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3 - Resistance against the Nuclear Village

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 February 2024

Mitsuyo Wada-Marciano
Affiliation:
Kyoto University, Japan
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Summary

Abstract: This chapter focuses on Kawai Hiroyuki, a career lawyer turned filmmaker. Although Kawai is an “amateur,” he chose cinema as the medium to convey his strong message to people outside the courtroom. I analyze the nuclear trilogy Kawai produced in succession after the 2011 quake: Nuclear Japan: Has Nuclear Power Brought Us Happiness? (2014); Nuclear Japan: The Nightmare Continues (2015); and Renewable Japan: The Search for a New Energy Paradigm (2017), also referring to his two short YouTube videos released in 2019. What is Kawai attempting to communicate to audiences? We can say: truth and justice. Kawai took on the role of director to disseminate “accurate” information that neither the government nor Tokyo Electric Power Company dares to tell.

Keywords: the nuclear village; cinema and law; intelligibility; the history of documentary; telementary

Kawai Hiroyuki, a lawyer/filmmaker, is “an amateur” when it comes to filmmaking; nonetheless, he has something he wants to convey. Why, then, did he choose film as his medium? Kawai responds as follows:

People do not read books anymore. So, when I thought about what would allow me to make an appeal to the largest audience possible, I could think of nothing else than film. Mass media such as television do not lend an ear to what I have to say in the first place.

To understand his “appeal” to a fuller extent, I was convinced that I had to scrutinize his documentary films.

In this chapter, I will shed light upon two films from the anti-nuclear trilogy that Kawai directed after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster. The first film, and the first in Kawai’s trilogy, is Nuclear Japan: Has Nuclear Power Brought Us Happiness? (2014, hereinafter referred to as Nuclear Japan). The second film is the final installment in the trilogy: Renewable Japan: The Search for a New Energy Paradigm (2017, hereinafter referred to as Renewable Japan). In addition, I will examine two short films that Kawai released on YouTube in 2019: The Criminal Trial of TEPCO: Undeniable Evidence and Nuclear Accident (hereinafter referred to as The Criminal Trial of TEPCO) and The Criminal Trial of TEPCO: The Unfair Ruling (hereinafter referred to as The Unfair Ruling).

Type
Chapter
Information
Japanese Filmmakers in the Wake of Fukushima
Perspectives on Nuclear Disasters
, pp. 83 - 116
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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