The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On
OMNI’S NEXT PORTALS FOR PEACE FILM ABOUT WAR, THIS
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 7 P. M. at OMNI.
The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On (ゆきゆきて、神軍 Yuki Yukite
Shingun) is a 1987 Japanese documentary film by director Kazuo Hara, whose title is loosely based on
the classical tale "The Emperor's New
Clothes". The documentary centers on Kenzo Okuzaki, a
62-year-old veteran of Japan's campaign in New Guinea in
the Second World War,
and follows him around as he searches out those responsible for the unexplained
deaths of two soldiers in his old unit.
Renowned documentary filmmaker Errol Morris listed The Emperor's
Naked Army Marches On as one of his Top 5 Favorite Films for Rotten Tomatoes.[2]
Summary[
Though Okuzaki ultimately holds Emperor Hirohito accountable for all the
suffering of the war, ("I hate irresponsible people...the most cowardly
man in Japan, is the Emperor Hirohito"), he painstakingly tracks down
former soldiers and officers, coaxing them into telling him about the deaths.
The people he talks to give different accounts of what transpired almost 40
years earlier, some saying that those killed were executed for desertion after the war was already over,
while others state that they were shot for cannibalizing New Guinea indigenous people.
At the end of the war, the Japanese
garrison in New Guinea was crammed into a small area and almost completely cut
off from food supplies, leading to starvation and according to some of the
interviewed, also to cannibalism. According to them, indigenous people
were euphemistically called "black
pigs" while Allied soldiers were "white pigs" - although one of
the interviewed says there was a ban on eating "white pigs". The
sister of one of the executed at one point states her belief that the two
(low-ranking privates) were
killed so that the officers would have something to eat.
During the course of Okuzaki's
investigation a captain named
Koshimizu is said to have issued the order to execute the pair, with a couple
of the interviewed also stating that he personally finished them off with his
pistol after the firing squad failed
to kill them outright, something the captain denies.
Okuzaki also discovers that there has been
another suspicious death in his unit and seeks out a former sergeant who is the
sole survivor of his regiment. After much
coaxing and a physical altercation the sergeant tells him that he personally
killed a fellow soldier who had been stealing food and that the corpse was then
eaten.
A written panel then states that the
documentary crew and Okuzaki traveled to New Guinea but that the footage was
confiscated by the Indonesian government.
An epilogue shows pictures of newspaper
headlines where it is revealed that Okuzaki attempted to kill Koshimizu, whom
he holds responsible for the deaths of the two soldiers. Not finding him at
home Okuzaki settled for shooting Koshimizu's son, who was seriously wounded.
It is then stated that Okuzaki was sentenced to 12 years of hard labor for attempted murder.
One of the methods of
Okuzaki, as seen in the film, was to paint his car and home with political
messages. Here is a picture of his carport.
Awards[
o Caligari Film Award
(Kazuo Hara)
·
Blue Ribbon Awards (1988)
o Best Director (Kazuo
Hara)
·
Kinema Junpo Awards (1988)
o Readers' Choice Award for
Best Film (Kazuo Hara)
·
Mainichi Film Concours (1988)
o Best Director (Kazuo
Hara)
o Best Sound Recording
(Toyohiko Kuribayashi)
o KNF Award (Kazuo Hara)
·
Yokohama Film
Festival (1988)
o Best Director (Kazuo
Hara)
o Best Film
I condensed this from the
Wikipedia entry, which is free, but they need financial support.
I haven’t seen the film yet, but this summary of the search for truth
about historical events reminds me of another Japanese film, Rashomon, in which four people recount
different versions of the story of a man's murder and
the rape of his wife. That (splendidly
acted, directed, and filmed) film helped me be more aware of the complexity of
the reported past, and I urged students to view it.
Like all the films in Portals for Peace, this film offers another
glimpse of the war plague, of which the US is the present leader,.. Here’s another: Children of Men. Is a futuristic film set in an
Orwellian England, but it could have even more appropriately been set in the
US, where endless wars against endless enemies have become the norm. Throughout
the world, most women have become infertile, threatening the extinction of the
human species. This is a very dark and violent film — someone
is always in the process of killing others, bombing buildings, etc. What is
encouraging, however, is that none of the warring factions are presented as
“good” guys fighting the “bad” guys. It is the anti-life nature of the war
system itself — with mankind as the endangered species — that dominates the
movie. (the preceding edited from
Wikipedia).
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