美しい人 (映画「美しい人」オリジナルサウンドトラック)
- 流派:Soundtrack 原声
- 语种:其他
- 发行时间:2018-03-30
- 唱片公司:432Hz Music Japan
- 类型:录音室专辑
- 歌曲
- 时长
简介
[Beauty Within] It's been more than 70 years since August 1945 when the world's first atomic bombs were dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The people who lived through the tragedies are now in their twilight years. What did they see on those fateful days? How did they manage to spend their lives after the historic bombings? Not all A-bomb victims were Japanese. They also included Koreans in Hiroshima and Nagasaki and Allied military personnel held in a prisoner-of-war camp in Nagasaki. Many were killed. Others managed to survive the time but in an abyss of despair. Very little is said about their experiences and sufferings. Through the interviews with the Korean victims and former Dutch POWs, the documentary (Beauty Within) tries to raise questions about war: What does battling mean? What is man? What do the stories of the non-Japanese sufferers speak to us of the present days? Summary of the documentary The Atomic Bomb and its victims The flames of their lives still shine brightly through their strength and resolve. In August 1945 the US dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. What unspeakable suffering did these atomic bombs leave in their wake? Stories of the tragedies have been told many times. Those who survived the atomic bombings are now in their twilight years. Many of the atomic bomb victims have lived long, hard and painful years since those fateful days in August, 1945. Many lost their entire families and struggled through the rest of their lives alone, with no close kin to give support or sympathy. Some became crippled by radiation poisoning and had to forgo love and marriage. Many suffered dreadful trauma and have struggled through life with painful memories. The ever-decreasing numbers of A-bomb victims are now in their final years, but for many the flames of passion still burn brightly within their hearts. After decades of physical suffering, neglect and discrimination, what stories do they have to tell? This is a documentary about survivors and their stories of those who didn't survive. Not all atomic bomb victims were Japanese. Besides the citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, this documentary also looks at A-bomb victims from Korea and the Netherlands. It is estimated that 66,000 in Hiroshima and 30,000 in Nagasaki died immediately, or by the end of August, 1945. Estimates vary but by 1950 Hiroshima had recorded 200,000 A-bomb deaths and Nagasaki 140,000. A further 250,000 Japanese have been recognized as "hibakusha" or official victims of the atomic bombings of both Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Little known is that some 40,000 Korean laborers and workers were in Hiroshima and Nagasaki on those fateful days. Over 20,000 Koreans are estimated to have died in the bombings, or soon after. A POW work-camp holding 195 Allied prisoners was near the epicenter of the Nagasaki atomic-bomb blast. Seven of the British, Dutch and Australian POWS died in the blast. What did these POWs witness in Nagasaki on that fateful day, far from the safety and security of their homelands? How has that experience affected their lives and what memories have lingered to this day? Their stories differ from the experiences of typical Japanese atomic bomb survivors, or even their fellow victims, the Koreans. Director's biographical notes and filmography Producer Shizu Azuma was born in 1975. Azuma's 2007 "The Women the War Left Behind" is a documentary about a war-displaced Japanese woman who was left behind in Manchuria, after Japan's defeat at the end of World War II. It was her first film and this film was screened at cinema theaters in Japan, international and domestic film festivals. In 2009, an emerging artists fellowship from Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs, allowed Azuma to hone her craft in Paris, France. While in Europe, Azuma studied the persecution of European Jews in World War II, from the early round-ups, to its culmination in the unspeakable Holocaust where 6 million died. Those facts reminded Azuma of the tragedy of atomic bombs dropped on Japan and motivated her to make this documentary, as her second film. Almost 70 years after the A-bombings, Azuma set out to record the histories and memories of surviving victims, many of whom experienced a lifetime of almost insurmountable difficulties and unimaginable loss initiated by those few seconds of horror as the atomic bombs exploded over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Full credit list Photographed & Directed by Shizu Azuma Sound Engineer: Yasuhiro Nagamine Music: Heigo Yokouchi Film Title Design: Hicozoh Akamatsu Produced & Released by Ichigu-sha Co., Ltd, S.A. Productions Sponsored by Agency for Cultural Affairs 2013/ Japan/ 116 minutes/ Color