Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Nanjing Massacre Inspires Global Film-Makers 70 Years On

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Nanjing Massacre Inspires Global Film-Makers 70 Years On

    NANJING MASSACRE INSPIRES GLOBAL FILM-MAKERS 70 YEARS ON
    By David de Sola

    Reuters
    Aug 21 2007
    UK

    HONG KONG (Reuters Life!) - Seven decades have yet to ease the
    bitterness surrounding wartime Japanese troops' occupation of the
    Chinese city of Nanjing, but they have inspired a raft of new films
    due out this year.

    On the 70th anniversary of the 1937 invasion, at least six movies
    recounting the fall of China's wartime capital -- then called Nanking
    -- to invading Japanese soldiers are in various stages of production
    or will be completed in the next 12 months in the United States,
    China and Hong Kong.

    China says Japanese troops slaughtered 300,000 men, women and children,
    while an Allied tribunal after World War Two put the death toll at
    142,000 and found evidence of 20,000 rapes.

    Some Japanese rightists historians say the numbers are exaggerated,
    estimating 20,000 soldiers and civilians were killed. Others deny a
    massacre happened at all.

    "Nanjing stirs up passions because, like the Holocaust or the Armenian
    genocide or the Cambodian killing fields, it is an affront to human
    dignity," Professor Phil Deans, an expert on Sino-Japanese relations
    at Temple University in Kyoto, said.

    The first film on the block was "Nanking", a U.S.-produced documentary
    detailing the conduct of Japanese troops through eye-witness accounts
    and grainy historical footage to depict what one Chinese survivor
    called the Japanese army's "three alls" policy: kill all, burn all,
    loot all.

    The film's creators hoped their work wouldn't open old wounds but
    promote a pacifist message between China and Japan.

    "Predominantly, this is an anti-war movie, not an anti-Japanese movie,"
    the movie's producer and AOL vice-chairman Ted Leonsis told Reuters
    in July when it premiered in Beijing.

    CONTROVERSY AND CELLULOID

    Richard Kwang, producer of an upcoming Hong Kong movie "Nanking
    Xmas 1937", said his project wouldn't dwell on the darker aspects of
    humanity, but on the "selfless love" of the Western missionaries who
    chose to stay behind to help survivors.

    "You won't see a lot of heavy stuff, not a lot of violence being
    shown. We are telling the story through the eyes of the Western
    missionaries with the massacre as the backdrop," he said.

    Kwang said he hoped to sign up A-list actors for the film -- which
    would be in English -- suggesting a high degree of interest among
    foreign audiences in the occupation.

    Other films in the works include a joint Chinese, American and British
    production based on the late Iris Chang's bestselling book "The Rape
    of Nanking" called "Purple Mountain", while Canadian film-maker Bill
    Spahic plans to tell Chang's life story in a documentary due for
    release in December.

    Chinese director Lu Chuan meanwhile, has received approval from
    Beijing to begin filming "Nanking! Nanking!".

    But in a sign of continued divisiveness over the topic, a Japanese
    documentary backed by nationalist figures will deny that any massacre
    took place.

    Director Satoru Mizushima told Reuters early this year that the film
    "Nanking" was full of "lies and fabrications" and it was easy to deploy
    "made-up facts" and "faked photographs".

    A group of conservative lawmakers in Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic
    Party also denounced "Nanking" as a fabrication.

    This is not the first time a film showing the 1937 Nanjing occupation
    has caused controversy in Japan.

    In 1988, the Japanese distributor of the Oscar-winning film "The
    Last Emperor" removed a 30-second clip showing old newsreel footage
    of Japanese soldiers committing atrocities in the city.

    "The revisionist historical position has strengthened in the last
    decade," said Deans, the Sino-Japanese expert.

    Deans noted the recent resignation of Japan's defense minister Fumio
    Kyuma -- who broached a taboo wartime issue by appearing to condone
    the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World
    War II as inevitable.

    By contrast, Deans added: "No one resigned because they said the
    Nanjing massacre never happened".
Working...
X