East and Southeast Asian documentaries, a list/database of the most significant works

 

updated September 14th 2016
In the past few days I was online looking for list(s) about East and Southeast Asian documentaries, lists that could give me an idea of what to watch if I wanted to explore the history non-fiction cinema in East and Southeast Asia, well….I couldn’t really find anything. So I told myself “why not making this list? a list that would also function as a sort of database for people interested in non-fiction” and then I realized that although I’m a kind of an expert in the history of Japanese documentary, I don’t really know that much about non-fiction cinema in the rest of Asia, besides of course Wang Bing, Rithy Panh and few others.


In most of these Asian countries cinema as a form of art is something pretty new and still in development, and often documentary is basically nothing more than state propaganda, fortunately things have slowly started to change few decades ago, when the new digital technologies allowed virtually everyone to become a documentary filmmaker and the social unrest set in motion the arts.
An interesting and useful resource on the topic, although it focuses more on the contemporary situation, is Asian Documentary Today, a book published by the Busan International Film Festival in 2012 and compiled and edited by AND (Asian Network of Documentary).

If anybody out there in the vastity of the internet is interested in helping me with this tiny project, a list/database of the most significant and important documentaries made in East and Southeast Asia, please feel free to get in touch with me: matteojpjp [at] gmail.com
Just a few “rules”:

– new works are accepted but don’t forget that the list is about “important and significant documentaries in the history of cinema”

– accepted are documentaries from these countries:  China, Hong Kong, Japan, North Korea, South Korea, Mongolia, Taiwan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines, East Timor, Brunei, Christmas Island, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand and Vietnam.

– if you’re kind enough to send me some suggestions or titles, it would be nice to have also few sentences contextualizing the documentary and briefly explaining what the movie is about.

the deadline is the end of September, once done and organised properly, I’ll publish it here on the blog and I’ll try to have it spread in the internet.

Thank you

Ogawa Production’s Sanrizuka Series – DVD Box set is out today

img_2206

Known outside Japan as the Narita series, the works made by Ogawa Shinsuke and his collective from 1968 to 1973 (with a return to the area in 1977) filming the battle and resistance of farmers, students, activists against the building of Narita airport, are usually called in Japan the Sanrizuka series, from the name of the area where the main struggle and land expropriation took place (an ongiing battle that is not over, by the way). As written briefly in a previous post, the Japanese label DIG is putting out on DVD all the documentaries of Ogawa Production, the first 3 films were released in June, and today (July 2nd) DIG is also releasing a DVD box set of the Sanrizuka/Narita series. Here’s the list of the works included in the box set:

  1.  Summer in Narita『日本解放戦線 三里塚の夏』(1968)
  2. Winter in Narita 『日本解放戦線 三里塚』(1970)
  3.  Three Day War in Narita『三里塚 第三次強制測量阻止斗争』(1970)
  4.  Narita: Peasants of the Second Fortress『三里塚 第二砦の人々』(1971)
  5. Narita: The Building of Iwayama Tower  『三里塚 岩山に鉄塔が出来た』(1972)
  6. Narita: Heta Village 『三里塚 辺田部落』(1973)
  7. Narita: The Sky of May  『三里塚 五月の空 里のかよい路』(1977)
  8. as an extra work, available only in the box set: Fimmaking and the Way to the Village (1973, Fukuda Katsuhiko)『映画作りとむらへの道』(1973)

The box set comes with a booklet where each movie is introduced and a final note by renown documentarist Hara Kazuo. I haven’t had the chance to watch them yet, so I can’t say anything about the transfer*.
All the DVDs don’t have English subtitles, but that fact that finally these important documentaries are available on home-video basically for the first time, the only Summer in Narita was released with a book a couple of years ago, is something to rejoice. My hope is that some label outside Japan (maybe Zakka Films or even Icarus Films, why not?) will one day in the near future put together an international edition.

* July 4th addendum: I’ve watched some minutes of Heta Village, The Building of Iwayama Tower and Narita: Peasants of the Second Fortress just to get an idea of the transfer’s quality. As I expected the DVDs mirror the quality of the original prints – I’ve seen them all on the big screen, but many times on quite battered DVD samples, so my memory might trick me here. Be that as it may, the movies are not in a good state, lots of scratches, flecks and dirt, in a perfect world they would have had a restoration first and they would have been transferred on DVD only later. But we don’t live in a perfect world and the huge debt left by the group is still hindering any “normal” process of preserving and presenting the works in a pristine state. That being said,  this release is an important step anyway, because it will help to introduce Owaga Pro and its documentaries to a wider and younger audience, and just for this reason it’s a project that should be praised.

ALONE (Gudu/孤独), Wang Bing and immanent cinema 

 

Alone
is the shorter version (89′) of Three Sister, a documentary about three little girls living alone in the mountains of the Yunnan province in China, a movie that was entered at the Venice Film Festival in 2013. Both of them are directed by Wang Bing, one of the most prominent filmmakers working today in non-fiction. Here’s the synopsis, taken from the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam where the movie premiered in 2013:

Ten years after Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks, which documented China’s transition to a modern industrial society and the growing pains this involves, filmmaker Wang Bing finds three sisters aged four, six and ten living with no parents 10,000 feet above sea level, in a small village in Yunnan province. Their mother has disappeared, while their father works in a nearby city and comes home every now and again to bring them new clothes. Family members and other villagers help keep the three children alive – efforts which, along with the communal vegetable garden, evoke the old days of socialism. This oscillation between modernization on the one hand and older values on the other is reflected by switching from long, patient observation by the camera to sudden accelerations and questions from the filmmaker, who operates the camera himself while recording the silent desperation and deprivations of this fragmented family. The mist that surrounds the village almost daily gives the impression that it has withdrawn from the rest of the world – although this proves an illusion. The surrounding areas are modernizing, the mayor explains, so the cost of living will have to increase here, too. All this escapes the children completely. They are too busy collecting food and delousing one another to notice.

More than a review of the movie, I’m sure you can find them out there in the vastness of the internet, what I’d like to do today is to throw some thoughts on the technical and aesthetic aspects of Wang Bing’s filmmaking, elements that make his movies – specifically Alone and by extension Three Sisters – a cinema of immanence (the definition is of course taken from Deleuze, you can read something about Wang Bing and the French philosopher here, while this review in Italian gave me the idea for this post). 

I think it’s not far fetched to say that it is because we, as viewers, are compelled and fascinated by the visual quality of Wang Bing’s works, that we also feel so engaged and moved by the stories he depicts in his documentaries. Remarkable is for instance the use he does of light, natural when shooting in the big expanses of rural China, and artificial -diegetic – when the filming takes place indoor; it’s something really impressive, but that often goes unnoticed because the subjects filmed and the stories told, socially and politically relevant, capture and consume the viewer attention. Every scene shot inside the shack where the three sisters live feels in fact like a painting, and this happens for a series of technical reasons: use of light, camera position, framing, duration and time of filming. 

IMG_0377
(a still from Night and Fog in Zona)

Something I’ve noticed when I was watching Night and Fog in Zona, the beautiful documentary on Wang Bing by Jung Sung-il, something very simple but at the same time a sort of revelation on his movie making style, is the way Wang Bing holds his camera (if I’m wrong I hope some readers will correct me). Rarely on his shoulder, and this is true especially when shooting indoor or outdoor while sitting, the camera often rests on his lap, or at least below his head, static and almost devoid of movements, it forges images that are less distant and thus more engaged with, and almost merged, with what he’s shooting. Wang Bing is crafting a cinema of immanence, an immanence made possible by the digital, and this is all the more true when he is filming people and their faces. It’s in these shots and scenes that the sound design gains its importance, the camera is gazing at the sisters from such an extreme proximity that we can literally hear their breathing, swallowing and sniffling, adding an element of almost tactile sonority to the movie. It is through this style and aesthetics that Wang Bing is able to convey the poverty and miserable destiny of the sisters, but at the same time their playfulness and innocence, everything here is depicted against the background of mountains, villages and shacks, deep inside the cold desolation of rural China, landscapes of absolute beauty and absolute indifference. 

Under the Cherry Tree (Tanaka Kei, 2015)

Under the Cherry Tree (桜の樹の下)  is the feature documentary debut of director Tanaka Kei, a work that follows the lives of the elderly residents of a public housing complex in Kawasaki. The movie had its premiere last October at the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival (Perspective Japan) where I had the chance to see it.

Under_the_Cherry_Tree

From the opening scene the film reveals its touch, low-tech and anti-spectacular in style, with a pretty straightforward approach, even though there are some formal choices that tend to be elliptical, I’ll come back to it later. Through her camera Tanaka gives voice to the elderly living in the building, focusing especially on four of them whom, during the 92 minutes of the movie, we slowly get to know and attached to. They all tell stories of solitude, each of them of course has a diverse background and even comes from different areas of Japan. Recollecting their past and the reasons for their present condition, a life on the edge of poverty, is a sort of candid confession that each of them is not afraid to make in front of the camera.  In the chatting with the director what strongly emerges is a sense of impending death, a common horizon that feels very near, and yet seems to be accepted and sometimes even anticipate as a sort of deliverance particularly from one elderly lady. Enveloped in their loneliness, the only sparse moments of comfort for these people are represented by the weekly meetings with the care staff or other various recreational activities organised in the neighborhood.
There’s a big cherry tree near the housing complex, often we see these old people taking a stroll, passing under it and stopping to contemplate its flowers, one of the few bursts of beauty coloring their lives and the visual element that gives the movie its title.
As gray as it might seem, the documentary is not only and always a bleak depiction of lives without hope, on the contrary and on a deeper level, is more an act of understanding and acceptance of what it means to become old in a society that doesn’t really know what to do with its old population. To lighten up the mood there are here and there some comic moments, especially when the two old ladies, one of them has also mental problems and lives in a flat piled with garbage, visit each other, chat and quarrel. Renouncing the classical narration in favor of intertitles and written texts to introduce the four protagonists is a perfect choice by the director, as a result the movie is smooth in its flow and doesn’t feel redundant or pathetic, gaining instead a matter-of-fact quality that is one of the best traits of the movie.

Under the Cherry Tree perfectly situates itself in a recent trend of Japanese documentary, a trend that has become almost a sub-genre, exploring and depicting the population ageing in Japan by focusing on personal lives of few individuals. A demographic trend that will dictate the political and economic decisions for years to come, Under the Cherry Tree goes together with Walking With my Mother,  Everyday Alzheimer 1 and 2 as one of the best examples of this unavoidable turn that Japanese non-fiction and Japanese society in general is undertaking.

 

 

List of lists – best documentaries of 2015

Let’s go “meta” once in a while, this is the idea I had few days back when I thought it would be interesting to make a list of lists, of course about documentaries. So, for the fun of it, but also because it might turn out into something surprisingly fascinating, I’ve decided to collect as many lists about “best non-fiction/documentary of 2015” as possible, newspapers, blogs, websites, magazines, personal lists and anything else will go. As usual with best-of-the-year-lists, and it’s particularly true for non-fiction movies, the most insightful part of the endeavour will probably be to see what other people have watched, that is what documentaries were distributed in different countries (in theatres or in other formats) during 2015, more than agreeing or not with someone’s choices.

This page will be updated periodically

Indiewire_best_doc_2015

Indiewire – The 20 Best Documentaries Of 2015 (here the original article):

  • 20. “The Hunting Ground” (Andrea Pino)
  • 19. “Heart Of A Dog” (Laurie Anderson)
  • 18. “Prophet’s Prey” (Amy Berg)
  • 17. “Seymour: An Introduction” (Ethan Hawke)
  • 16. “The Seven Five” (Tiller Russell)
  • 15. “The Jinx” (Andrew Jarecki)
  • 14. “The Pearl Button” (Patricio Guzmán)
  • 13. “The Salt of the Earth” (Wim Wenders)
  • 12. “In Jackson Heights” (Frederick Wiseman)
  • 11. “The Black Panthers: Vanguard of a Revolution” (Stanley Nelson)
  • 10. “Junun” (Paul Thomas Anderson)
  • 9. “Dreamcatcher” (Kim Longinotto)
  • 8. ”Listen To Me Marlon” (Stevan Riley)
  • 7. “Best of Enemies” (Robert Gordon, Morgan Neville)
  • 6. “The Look of Silence” (Joshua Oppenheimer)
  • 5. “Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck” (Brett Morgen)
  • 4. “Amy” (Asif Kapadia)
  • 3. “(T)error” (Lyric R. Cabral, David Felix Sutcliffe)
  • 2. “Meru” (Jimmy Chin, E. Chai Vasarhelyi)
  • 1. “Cartel Land” (Matthew Heineman)

 

Men’s Journal – 13 must-watch docs of 2015 (original article here):

  • Cartel Land (Matthew Heineman)
  • Stray Dog (Debra Granik)
  • Winter of Fire (Evgeny Afineevsky)
  • Montage of Heck (Brett Morgen)
  • Listen to Me Brando (Stevan Riley)
  • Racing Extinction (Louie Psihoyos)
  • Going Clear (Alex Gibney)
  • Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • Meru (Jimmy Chin, E. Chai Vasarhelyi)
  • Call Me Lucky (Bobcat Godthwait)
  • Best of Enemies (Robert Gordon, Morgan Neville)
  • The Look of Silence  (Joshua Oppenheimer)
  • All Things Must Pass (Colin Hanks) 

  

NonFics – The 6 Must See Musical Dicumentaries of 2015 (original here): 

  • Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten: Cambodia’s Lost Rock ‘n’ Roll (John Pirozzi) 
  • Junun (Paul Thomas Anderson)
  • A Poem is a Naked Person (Les Blank)
  • Rubble Kings (Shan Nicholson)
  • Seymour: An Introduction (Ethan Hawke)

  
Paste – The 20 Best Documentaries of 2015 (here the article): 

  • 20. Finders Keepers (Bryan Carberry, J. Clay Tweel)
  • 19. What Happened, Miss Simone? (Liz Garbus)
  • 18. The Wolf Pack (Crystal Moselle)
  • 17. Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • 16. Best of Enemies” (Robert Gordon, Morgan Neville)
  • 15. The Nightmare (Rodney Ascher)
  • 14. Welcome to Leith (Michael Beach Nichols, Christopher K. Walker)
  • 13. Approaching the Elephant (Amanda Wilder) 
  • 12. We Come as Friends (Hubert Sauper)
  • 11. Stray Dog (Debra Granik) 
  • 10. Heart Of A Dog” (Laurie Anderson)
  • 9. Western (Bill Ross, Turner Ross)
  • 8. Brand: A Second Coming (Indi Timoner) 
  • 7. Iris (Albert Maysles)
  • 6. Seymour: An Introduction (Ethan Hawke)
  • 5. Janis: Little Girl Blue (Amy Berg)
  • 4. In Jackson Heights” (Frederick Wiseman)
  • 3. The Look of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer)
  • 2. (T)error (Lyric R. Cabral, David Felix Sutcliffe
  • 1. Cartel Land” (Matthew Heineman)

  
Screen Daily – critics’ top documentaries of 2015 (complete article here):

Fionnuala Halligan

  • My Nazi Legacy (David Evans)

Tom Grierson

  • (T)error (Lyric R Cabral, David Felix Sutcliffe)

Allan Hunter

  • The Fear of 13 (David Sington)

Dan Fainaru

  • Hitchcock/Truffaut (Kent Jones)

Lee Marshall

  • Behemoth (Zhao Liang)

Jonathan Romney 

  • De Palma (Noah Baumbach, Jake Paltrow)

Lisa Nesselson

  • Where To Invade Next (Michael Moore)

Charles Gant

  • Amy (Asif Kapadia)

Wendy Ide 

  • Behemoth (Zhao Liang)

James Marsh

  • The Look Of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer)

  
Awards Daily – Seven Great Documentaries of 2015 (here the original article): 

  • The Look Of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer)
  • Heart Of A Dog (Laurie Anderson)
  • Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • In Jackson Heights (Frederick Wiseman)
  • Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief (Alex Gibney)
  • Montage of Heck (Brett Morgen)
  • Listen To Me Marlon” (Stevan Riley)

  
Philly.com – Best documentaries of 2015  (original article here): 

  • Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • Hitchcock/Truffaut (Kent Jones)
  • Listen to Me Marlon (Stevan Riley)
  • What Happened Miss Simone? (Liz Garbus) 
  • The Wolfpack (Crystal Moselle) 

  
Keyframe – The Best Documentaries of 2015 (here the original):

  • 1. The Look of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer)
  • 2. The Iron Ministry (J.P. Sniadecki)
  • 3. In Jackson Heights (Frederick Wiseman)
  • 4. The Pearl Button (Patricio Guzmán)
  • 5. The Royal Road (Jenni Olson)
  • 6. Heart of a Dog (Laurie Anderson)
  • 7. Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • 8. What Happened, Miss Simone? (Liz Garbus)
  • 9. Iris (Albert Maysles)
  • 10. Listen to Me Marlon (Stevan Riley)

  

Nonfics – The 15 Best Documentaries of 2015 (here the original): 

  • 15. Evaporating Borders (Iva Radivojevic)
  • 14. Best of Enemies (Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville)
  • 13. Finders Keepers (J. Clay Tweel and Bryan Carberry)
  • 12. The Nightmare (Rodney Ascher)
  • 11. In the Basement (Ulrich Seidl)
  • 10. The Iron Ministry (J.P. Sniadecki)
  • 9.  Stray Dog (Debra Granik) 
  • 8. Approaching the Elephant (Amanda Wilder)
  • 7. The Salt of the Earth (Wim Wenders)
  • 6. We Come as Friends (Hubert Sauper)
  • 5. Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • 4. In Jackson Heights (Frederick Wiseman)
  • 3. The Russian Woodpecker (Chad Gracia)
  • 2. A Poem is a Naked Person (Les Blank)
  • 1. The Look of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer)

  
Doc Soup – Top Ten Documentaries of 2015 (original article here):

  • 10. Hunting Ground (Kirby Dick)
  • 9. Listen to Me Marlon (Stevan Riley)
  • 8. The Wolfpack (Crystal Moselle)
  • 7. Hitchcock/Truffaut (Kent Jones)
  • 6. Almost There (Dan Rybicky, Aaron Wickenden)
  • 5. Winter on Fire (Evgeny Afineevsky)
  • 4. Stand By for Tape Playback (Ross Sutherland)
  • 3. Montage of Heck (Brett Morgen)
  • 2. Cartel Land (Matthew Heineman)
  • 1. The Look of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer)

  
Peter Bradshaw – Best documentaries of 2015 (read the original here): 

  • Amy (Dir. Asif Kapadia)
  • The Look of Silence (Dir. Joshua Oppenheimer)
  • He Named Me Malala (Dir. Davis Guggenheim)
  • A Syrian Love Story (Dir. Sean Mcallister)
  • Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief (Dir. Alex Gibney)
  • We Are Many (Dir. Amir Amirani)
  • The Last of the Unjust (Dir. Claude Lanzmann)
  • Beyond Clueless (Dir. Charlie Lyne)
  • Best of Enemies (Dirs. Morgan Grenville, Robert Gordon)
  • My Nazi Legacy (Dir. David Evans) 

  

Ray Pride – Fifteen Feature Documentaries For 2015 (original’s here

  • 1. The Look Of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer) 
  • 2. Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • 3. Heart of a Dog (Laurie Anderson) 
  • 4. Hitchcock/Truffaut (Kent Jones) 
  • 5. In Jackson Heights (Frederick Wiseman)
  • 6. The Iron Ministry (J. P. Sniadecki) 
  • 7. The Russian Woodpecker (Chad Gracia) 
  • 8. We Come As Friends (Hubert Sauper)
  • 9. Almost There (Dan Rybicky, Aaron Wickenden)
  • 10. Iris (Albert Maysles)
  • 11. Listen To Me Marlon (Stevan Riley)
  • 12. The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution (Stanley Nelson) 
  • 13. Arabian Nights (Miguel Gomes)
  • 14. Sembène! (Samba Gadjigo, Jason Silverman)
  • 15. Going Clear: Scientology And The Prison of Belief (Alex Gibney)

  

3rd Annual Nonfics Year-End Poll (the complete list, 103 docs, here

  • 1. The Look Of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer) 
  • 2. Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • 3. Best of Enemies (Dirs. Morgan Grenville, Robert Gordon)
  • 4. Listen to Me Marlon (Stevan Riley)
  • 5. In Jackson Heights (Frederick Wiseman) 
  • 6. Stray Dog (Debra Granik)
  • 7. Cartel Land (Matthew Heineman)
  • 8. Montage of Heck (Brett Morgen)
  • 9. Finders Keepers (J. Clay Tweel and Bryan Carberry)
  • 10. The Wolfpack (Crystal Moselle)

  
The Film Stage – The Best documentaries of 2015 (here the original): 

  • Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • Ballet 422 (Jody Lee Lipes)
  • Best of Enemies (Morgan Neville and Robert Gordon)
  • Call Me Lucky (Bobcat Goldthwait
  •  Cartel Land (Matthew Heineman)
  • Cobain: Montage of Heck (Brett Morgen)
  • Democrats (Camilla Nielsson)
  • Finders Keepers (Bryan Carberry and J. Clay Tweel)
  • Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief (Alex Gibney)
  • Hitchcock/Truffaut (Kent Jones)
  • The Hunting Ground (Kirby Dick)
  • In My Father’s House (Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg)
  • Iris (Albert Maysles)
  • Junun (Paul Thomas Anderson)
  • In Jackson Heights (Frederick Wiseman)
  • Listen to Me Marlon (Stevan Riley)
  • The Look of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer)
  • The Pearl Button (Patricio Guzmán)
  • The Russian Woodpecker (Chad Gracia)
  • The Salt of the Earth (Wim Wenders and Juliano Ribeiro Salgado)
  • Stray Dog (Debra Granik)
  • We Come as Friends (Hubert Sauper)
  • Leith (Michael Beach Nichols and Christopher K. Walker)
  • What Happened Miss Simone? (Liz Garbus)
  • The Wolfpack (Crystal Moselle)

Ray Pride – Fifteen Feature Documentaries For 2015 (original’s here

  • 1. The Look Of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer) 
  • 2. Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • 3. Heart of a Dog (Laurie Anderson) 
  • 4. Hitchcock/Truffaut (Kent Jones) 
  • 5. In Jackson Heights (Frederick Wiseman)
  • 6. The Iron Ministry (J. P. Sniadecki) 
  • 7. The Russian Woodpecker (Chad Gracia) 
  • 8. We Come As Friends (Hubert Sauper)
  • 9. Almost There (Dan Rybicky, Aaron Wickenden)
  • 10. Iris (Albert Maysles)
  • 11. Listen To Me Marlon (Stevan Riley)
  • 12. The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution (Stanley Nelson) 
  • 13. Arabian Nights (Miguel Gomes)
  • 14. Sembène! (Samba Gadjigo, Jason Silverman)
  • 15. Going Clear: Scientology And The Prison of Belief (Alex Gibney)

3rd Annual Nonfics Year-End Poll (the complete list, 103 docs, here

  • 1. The Look Of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer) 
  • 2. Amy (Asif Kapadia)
  • 3. Best of Enemies (287)
  • 4. Listen to Me Marlon (220)
  • 5. In Jackson Heights (193)
  • 6. Stray Dog (164)
  • 7. Cartel Land (159)
  • 8. Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck (146)
  • 9. Finders Keepers (139)
  • 10. The Wolfpack (138)

The best documentaries of 2015 – my list

As 2015 comes to an end, it’s that time of the year again, the period when every cinephile is compelled to make his/her best movies list. I couldn’t not post my own one. I’ve mostly watched documentaries from East Asia, my list is then more like a “Best documentary of 2015 from East Asia” type of list, but at the end I’ve added a couple of movies from other part of the world and some (re)discoveries I’ve done during this 2015. Just a disclaimer, it’s a favorite list more than a best list, here we go (listed in the order I’ve seen them):

Walking with my Mother (Sakaguchi Katsumi, 2014)

An exploration of loss, sickness and memory in a society (the Japanese one) that is getting older and older, told in the shape of a private documentary, here some thoughts on the movie.

walking_with_mother

Aragane (Oda Kaori, 2015)

The camera follows patiently and almost hypnotically the workers of an old coal mine in Bosnia down into the darkness of their daily routine. The movie is visually stunning, partly documentary and partly experimental cinema, director Oda Kaori knows how to use the digital medium for her cinematic purposes in a work that revolves around the concept of duration and its materiality, and that is almost structural cinema in its construction. I had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing the director, the conversation was published on the Italian newspaper Il Manifesto, I’m currently working on an English translation and on a review/piece for this blog (maybe next year).

Oyster Factory (Sōda Kazuhiro, 2015)

The latest work from Japanese director Sōda Kazuhiro, together with Theatre 1 and 2, my favourite among his documentaries. I’ve written more about the film here.

IMG_5344

France Is Our Mother Country (Rithy Panh, 2015)

Rithy Panh (2-21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine, The Missing Picture) constructs a critical and satirical work about the colonial rule of Cambodia by France, using only footage, archival images and propaganda films shot by the rulers themselves. The power of re-editing and collage documentary.

france-is-our-mother-country

Night and Fog in Zona (Jung Sung-il, 2015)

A documentary about the great Wang Bing by movie critic-turned-director Jung Sung-ilhere you can read my review.

IMG_0379-0

The Moulin (Huang Ya-li, 2015)

Formally engaging and elliptical, I don’t really know how much of my fascination for this movie comes from its themes, a group of Taiwanese avant-garde artists active in the 30′ during the Japanese colonial period, and how much from the documentary itself.

TheMoulin_Taiwan4

Documentaries from other parts of the world:

The Iron Ministry ( J.P. Sniadecki, 2014) and in general all the movies by Sniadecki: Demolition, People’s Park, Yumen….

Jujun (Paul Thomas Anderson, 2015)

 

(re)discoveries of 2015:

The Vampires of Poverty (Carlos Mayolo, Luis Ospina, 1977)

All the documentaries/works of the great Agnès Varda (it was a pleasure watching 14 of her films this year)

 

Interview with Toshi Fujiwara about No Man’s Zone (無人地帯, 2011)

I’m reposting here and Interview I did in 2011 with Fujiwara Toshi, author of No Man’s Zone (無人地帯, 2011), to this day and in my opinion the best documentary about the March 11th’s triple disaster.
The interview was originally posted on the Italian blog Sonatine. You can purchase the DVD of the movie here (with English subtitles). 

    

Matteo Boscarol I’ve watched a couple of documentaries dealing with the disaster that hit Japan on March 11th, but in my opinion, your work stands apart from them. I think you adopted a broader perspective. Among other things, I felt No Man’s Zone was a visual essay on the impact that images of destruction have on our society.
Toshi Fujiwara Yes, you’re right but obviously it was something that was inside me from before the disaster and grew up over the years.
M.B. It was also like watching two documentaries, one with the row images and interviews from the area hit by the tragedy, the other one more reflective, with the narration and the editing giving a philosophical frame.
T.F. We’ve tried to create two separate layers very deliberately. One of the reasons is that it is a French-Japanese co-production. The cameraman and director are Japanese, and the editor is French…so why not have two layers to incorporate a certain distance within the contest. Originally, we thought of a French voice and the narration was different from the final one. It was more like a fictional story. The idea was that of a French woman and a Japanese director corresponding through the Internet. We collaborated with some French writers, but they didn’t get the right ideas because it was also supposed to be quite critical of the French culture itself. It turned into something rather awfully colonialist. So it didn’t work and I rewrote the whole narration.
M.B. In this way, it should be able to reach a foreign audience. The Japanese media didn’t do a good job, but at the same time, the international media excelled in misinformation, especially the Italian media.
T.F. Even here in Japan, it’s turning this way. Now the Japanese anti-nuclear movements are paradoxically against the people of Fukushima.
M.B. There’s a scene that particularly impressed me and even reminded me of some parts of Ogawa Shinsuke’s Heta Buraku. It’s the one when the camera is following an old lady wandering and speaking in her garden.
T.F Thank you for the compliment. It is probably because my cameraman, Takanobu Kato, was working with Ogawa. He was one of the last people to leave the production. It was important that he was with me because, being trained under Ogawa when his production was in Yamagata, he literally lived there raising rice and so on. As such, he knew how to shoot rice fields, and other details of life in the countryside.
M.B. In the same scene through the memory of the old lady, there are also references to a wider sense of time, historical and natural cycles, reaching as far as the period after the Second World War.
T.F. I would say that it goes even farther back in time; in fact, she recalls her father having been a silk worms teacher. It was before the war when Japan biggest export was silk itself.The images of movies of this kind focus usually on destruction, but we tried to suggest what was there before the destruction. What was destroyed and also what the people of these areas have lost is much more important.

 

M.B. What triggered you to go to Fukushima a month after the Earthquake to start to shoot?
T.F. I was disgusted by the way the images were shown on TV. The live footage didn’t show us how the people used to live, and didn’t give people a chance to communicate. Their lives up there were so different from the lives of journalists in Tokyo; moreover, the images are just raw material without any good editing. My intention was to make a film that would look distinctly different from what we watched on television, which was usually shot very hastily with a hand-held camera. One of my first commitments was to shoot as beautifully as we could. That’s why, when possible, we used a tripod. Already, I’d hated lots of contemporary documentaries because their shots aren’t beautiful. They shoot them too easily. Even though we did it in 10 days, we tried to do it as well as we could. Beautiful editing also was important.
M.B. And the voice of Khanjian Arsinée for the narration is very beautiful indeed.
T.F. Her voice is incredible. She’ s Armenian, but she grew up in Lebanon so her native tongues are Arabic and French. She moved to Canada when she was 17, in French-speaking Quebec. I liked her voice because she is not totally native in English [the narration is in English] and so we cannot clearly identify the nationality of her voice.

 

M.B. You went to Fukushima with your cameraman and one assistant—is that right?
T.F. Yes, it’s better to have a small crew also knowing that the TV people often annoy them…
M.B. How did the people there react to you and your crew?
T.F. Again, we were only three and we were not wearing any protective gear or masks, so they were extremely polite to us as they usually are to everybody else. You know, the people of Tohoku have a tradition for hospitality. Also, we were not asking abrupt and stupid questions like “what do you think of that and that…?”.
M.B. The problem of how to approach and relate to the people affected by disasters is a crucial one for the art of documentary. At the last Yamagata Documentary International Film Festival, there was a debate on this topic.
T.F. I was there myself, and I think the largest problem of these documentaries is that they’re more about the filmmakers going there and not necessarily about the places and the people living there. The general problem is that many filmmakers went to Tohoku, but they made films about their own confusion and panicked state of minds, while they forgot to make documentaries about the damages of the quake and the people who were directly touched by the tragedies. They are too self-centered and unconsciously self-obsessed. An even larger problem that I observe is that the audience in Tokyo takes comfort in seeing these movies, being reassured that the filmmakers are also confused. I find this tendency very problematic for being too masturbatory. They are forgetting the original function of cinema, which must be something open to create links and communications; under such circumstances, we should be mediums to make a bridge between those who experienced the tragedies and us who didn’t. That is one of the reasons why we tried to make “No Man’s Zone” an open film text, instead of sharing the personal experiences (if not self-excuses) of filmmakers. We wanted it to ask direct questions to the audience. Of course, my cameraman worked with Ogawa and I made a film about Tsuchimoto. Thus, I was influenced by others and different generations of documentary’s filmmakers, I’ve kind of skipped the generation of the so-called private documentaries.
M.B. Like Kawase Naomi?
I like Kawase and what she does; she is of my generation, but we do different things and that’s ok with me. I could say that I do documentaries like in the 60s, except that there is no more politics involved. Japanese leftist politics disintegrated in a very rapid way after the 70s.
M.B. Do you think March 11th will change something in filmmaking?
T.F. In my opinion, it should. But I haven’t seen the change yet. After all, only 9 months have passed. One thing for sure is that we have to try to do something different, different from what we were doing before. Actually, before the quake, I was working on a movie but now I’m not sure if it’s worthwhile to complete it. It’s about Japan before March 11th.
It’s a different period, it’s like being after a war in a way.
M.B. We should consider March 11th almost as important as August 15th, 1945.
A few months ago, I talked to Sono Sion, and he said that the tragedy was paradoxically “good” because it suddenly uncovered many problems affecting the Japanese society. For instance the relationship between urban centers and countryside, that is Tokyo-Tohoku…
T.F. I totally agree with him. We (in Tokyo) are just parasites, which is repeatedly stated in No Man’s Zone. The nuclear plants have been there for almost 40 years, and what is awful is that even now after 9 months in Tokyo, people don’t want to admit that we’re responsible.
And even now [this interview was conducted during the Christmas period], it’s like nothing has happened at all.At the Tokyo FilmEx this year, a lady in the audience from Fukushima was quite surprised after watching the movie. She walked outside and found the streets in full illumination for Christmas.
M.B. Can you tell us something about the music used in the film?
T.F. It was composed and performed by a free jazz American musician who’s been living in France for many years. His name is Barre Phillips and we’ve worked together before [Independence, 2002]. Again, we decided on a non-Japanese composer, one of the best that you can get, and also one that was not so expensive and not too commercial. The funny thing is that he recorded the music in a chapel of an ancient monastery in the south of France. In No Man’s Zone, there are a lot of Japanese traditional views with images of Buddhas and small gods, so I thought it would be interesting to have the music recorded in a Catholic chapel. In this way, the music and the narration can maybe suggest something universal. That’s why I wanted someone else and not myself to do the narration in English. It would otherwise have become just a documentary about my experience. This nuclear accident is asking tremendous and huge questions to all of us, to our civilization and how we have related ourselves to nature and to the universe, how we perceive our lives. We actually have to think about the philosophical and even the religious aspects of it all, I would say, and it’s stated at the end of the film, that Japan, embracing western civilization, has accepted its idea of a nature existing for us, to serve humans. It’s actually a very Christian concept. It is not even Jewish or Islamic; it’s a particular belief of Christianity to say that God created everything for us.

Kobe Documentary Film Festival 2015 第7回神戸ドキュメンタリー映画祭 (Oct 31st – Nov 10th)

In the autumn film festival madness, there are more film fests between October and November than stars in the sky, a very tiny but special place is occupied by the Kobe Documentary Film Festival,  an event established in 2009 at the Kobe Planet Film Archive. An important place for cinephiles and cinema lovers, the archive is a small structure, the theatre has only 38 seats, set up in 2007 and currently managed by Yasui Yoshio, one of the most renowed film historians and archivists of Japan. Incidentally Kobe has a special relationship to the seventh art, Edison’s Kinetoscope was imported to Kobe in 1896 and one year after the city was also the first place in Japan where the Lumiere brothers brought their Cinematographe

In these 7 years the mini festival, it’s more like a retrospective than a “real” fest, has presented works of Yanagisawa Hisao and Tsuchimoto Noriaki – in its 2 first editions, a special devoted to the great Tōhōku Earthquake and documentary in 2011, and the following year a retrospective on NDU and Nunokawa Tetsurō, a showcase that I was able to attend, a real discovery that allowed me to deepen my knowledge of one of the most important Japanese film collective of the 60s and 70s, a real treat. 

Kobe Documentary Film Festival kicks off tomorrow, October 31st,  and will last until November 10th. This year the main focus won’t be on one filmmaker or a movement in particular, but the screenings will be more varied. Discovering Images—The Age of Matsumoto Toshio, a documentary on Matsumoto Toshio by Takefumi Tsutsui, almost 12 hours (the work is divided in 5 parts) to retrace the career of one of the most important Japanese filmmakers and theorists of the post-bellic period, is maybe the most important to me. London (1994), Robinson in Space (1997) and Robinson in Ruins (2001) by Patrick Keiller, under the wave, on the ground (波のした、土のうえ) by Komori Haruka and Seo Natsumi will also be screened, and last but not least a special selection from the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival, 5 films screened in the last 25 years at the prestigious event. 

Unfortunately I won’t be able to attend the festival this year, what I really wanted to see was the massive documentary on Matsumoto – I missed it at Yamagata as well, and under the wave, on the ground, but I’m sure there will be more chances to catch up with them. 

You can find the program here (only Japanese)

Top scenes – The Cherry Tree with Gray Blossoms 「薄墨の桜」(Haneda Sumiko, 1977)

Slightly edited in January 2025

Born in 1926 in Dalian, China, while the area was still under Japanese occupation, Haneda Sumiko later moved to Japan and eventually joined Iwanami Productions (founded in 1950), a company that was to play a major role in the development of Japanese documentary in the post-war years. Within Iwanami, after working as an assistant director on some PR films, she made her debut behind the camera in 1957 with Women’s College in the Village (村の婦人学級); a 31-year-old woman directing a film at the end of the 1950s in a very male-dominated world like the Japanese film industry must have been, and was, something truly extraordinary. In 1981 Haneda left Iwanami Productions to become a freelance filmmaker, and from then on she made many non-fiction films, exploring a wide and diverse range of subjects, most of which were produced by Jiyū Kobo.

The Cherry Tree with Gray Blossoms 薄墨の桜 is a short and poetic documentary, a kind of visual poem, completed in 1977, but a project Haneda had been pursuing and thinking about for a long time. Shot in a small valley in Gifu Prefecture, the film is a reflection on the mortality and transience of all things, disguised as a documentary about a 1300-year-old cherry tree. Haneda and her cameraman follow the seasonal changes in and around this ancient tree, the festivals, and the life of the small communities in the surrounding area. The Cherry Tree with Gray Blossoms is also a mourning process for the death of her sister, a personal way for Haneda to deal with the devastating pain of losing her own sister, symbolically represented on screen by a girl who appears several times like a phantasmic presence, mostly at the beginning and end of the film.

As we can see from the stills below, taken from the last part of the film – a flowing river, small wild flowers and weeds, a graveyard, a girl sighing and, after a few close-ups of her looking at the camera, walking away – Haneda explores, visually and with a poetic touch, universal themes such as mortality, absence and the transience of life. What’s also significant about the film is that its more lyrical moments, such as the one just described, are punctuated by guitar arpeggios played by Iwasaki Mitsuharu, a musical theme that magnifies the fleeting essence of life embodied in the film.

The movie is available on DVD (only in Japanese) by Jiyū Kōbō or in this Iwanami Nihon Documentary DVD-BOX.

vlcsnap-2015-01-28-21h24m04s10

Three documentaries by Matsubayashi Yoju out on DVD (with Eng sub)

  
ZakkaFilms, a label specialised in Japanese movies, has announced three new releases to be included in its Filmmakers’ Market, Flowers and Troops (花の兵隊, 2009), Fukushima: Memories of the Lost Landscape (相馬看花, 2012) and The Horses of Fukushima (祭の馬, 2013) all of them by Matsubayashi Yoju. According to ZakkaFilms homepage Filmmakers’ Market is “a new marketplace for documentaries that tears down the walls separating Japanese filmmakers and foreign viewers and allows filmmakers to bring their English-subtitled works in for direct sale (..) All of the DVDs are packaged by the directors and producers themselves, so some may have only Japanese on the package or in the booklet (we note as such below), but and all of them have English subtitles.” 
I had the chance to see two of the three documentaries, those about Fukushima, here in Japan on the big screen. While I liked Fukushima: Memories of the Lost Landscape – it’s in fact one of my favourite movies about Japan’s 3.11 triple disaster together with Fujiwara Toshi’s No Man’s Zone (無人地帯, 2012) – I couldn’t really connect with The Horses of Fukushima.

Here the synopsis of Fukushima: Memories of the Lost Landscape taken from ZakkaFilms homepage

The Enei district of Minami Soma town lies within the 20 km exclusion zone around the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. In early April 2011, immediately after the devastating tsunami and nuclear meltdown forced people to evacuate the area, filmmaker Yoju Matsubayashi rushed here with relief goods. From a chance meeting with city councilor Kyoko Tanaka, he began making this film. Living together with the evacuees in school classrooms designated as temporary refuge centers, he captured an extraordinary period in the lives of the local people. Interspersed with humorous episodes and deep emotions, the film delves into memories of a local culture that has been taken away by the tragedy.

More the focusing on the place and the ruins, avoiding whenever possible a kind of disaster porn that was very present on TV and in many movies soon after the earthquake, Matsubayashi turns his camera towards the people, their memories and their stories. The more the documentary approaches its center and core, the more the shaky images and those shot from moving cars disappear, the pace of the movie itself becoming slow and more contemplative.  The landscape, the lost landscape, is recreated in the film by the words and recollections of the people to whom Matsubayashi talked, or better by the conversations between them. It’s also a time-landscape, the memories of the elderly have the power to convey and embrace larger historical cycles, the conditions before the war, the poverty of the post-bellic period and the resulting process of industrialisation that forever changed the face and the balance of forces in the area, the devil pact with the nuclear industry being the most prominent one.

Flowers and Troops seems to be an interesting piece of work as well, a movie that explores the lives of Japanese soldiers who refused to come back to Japan from Thailand and Burma after the Pacific War, a theme that Imamura Shōhei, Matsubayashi studied with him, delved into during the 70s with several made-for-TV documentaries (they’re included in this box-set). 

You can order and purchase the three DVDs by Matsubayashi directly on ZakkaFilms homepage