Jump to content

Fumio Kamei

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by InternetArchiveBot (talk | contribs) at 07:05, 8 September 2019 (Bluelinking 1 books for verifiability.) #IABot (v2.1alpha3). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Fumio Kamei (亀井文夫, Kamei Fumio) (1 April 1908 – 27 February 1987) was a left-wing Japanese documentary and fiction film director.

Biography

Kamei went to the Soviet Union in 1928 to study filmmaking, but had to return home because of an illness. He eventually began working at Photo Chemical Laboratories (PCL), one of the precursors to Toho, where he made a name for himself making documentaries - or "culture films" (bunka eiga) as they were called at the time - that were strongly influenced by Soviet montage theory. Many were propaganda films about Japan's war in China, such as Shanghai and Peking, but his Fighting Soldiers (Tatakau heitai) was criticized by authorities as a potentially anti-war film, one police official in fact protesting that "These aren't fighting soldiers, they're tired soldiers!" [1] The release of the film was blocked, but Fighting Soldiers was later celebrated as one of the masterpieces of Japanese documentary.[1][2] After making a film about the poet Kobayashi Issa, Kamei was the only Japanese film director arrested for violation of the Peace Preservation Law and became the first filmmaker to lose his license to direct under the 1939 Film Law.[1][2][3] After World War II, he resumed filmmaking with The Japanese Tragedy (Nihon no higeki), a film produced at Nichiei by Akira Iwasaki, which charged Japanese leaders with responsibility for pursuing a disastrous war. The film, however, was eventually banned by Occupation authorities in particular for its critical depiction of Emperor Hirohito.[4] Kamei thus had films banned by both the Japanese government and the American Occupation forces. Kamei also made fiction films such as War and Peace (Sensō to heiwa), co-directed with Satsuo Yamamoto, but he primarily continued to produce independent documentaries protesting such issues as American bases in Japan, the nuclear bomb, discrimination against burakumin in Japan, and environmental destruction.

Selected filmography

Advertisement for Shanghai

References

  1. ^ a b c Arnold, Michael. "Fighting Soldiers." Midnight Eye. 21 November 2002. Accessed 9 November 2009
  2. ^ a b Nornes, Abé Mark. Japanese Documentary Film. Pp. 148-182
  3. ^ Kamei, Fumio, and Mamoru Makino. "Documentarists of Japan, No. 6: Kamei Fumio." Documentary Box. 27 March 1995. Accessed 9 November 2009
  4. ^ Hirano, Kyoko. Mr. Smith Goes to Tokyo. Pp. 104-145

Further reading

  • Hirano, Kyoko (1992). Mr. Smith Goes to Tokyo: The Japanese Cinema under the Occupation, 1945-1952. Smithsonian Institution. ISBN 1-56098-157-1.
  • Isaacs, Jeffrey (2013). "Kamei, Fumio". In Aitken, Ian (ed.). The Concise Routledge Encyclopedia of the Documentary Film. Hoboken, New Jersey: Routledge. pp. 473–476. ISBN 978-1-136-51206-3.
  • Nornes, Abé Mark (2003). Japanese Documentary Film: The Meiji Era through Hiroshima. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-4045-9.