Shinpei Takeda

Shinpei Takeda is a Japanese filmmaker, visual artist, and musician based in Tijuana, Mexico. His works includes a wide range of themes regarding memories and history in various mediums: documentary films, multi-media installations, video projection, public installations, community collaborative projects in various public and non-public contexts. He has been collecting over 50 oral stories of atomic bomb survivors living in North and South Americas since 2005. His recent films include "El Mexico mas Cercano a Japon" (2008) about Japanese photographer in Tijuana in 1920s.

Eiji Wakamatsu

A friend of director, Shinpei Takeda, who comes to help him with the atomic bomb survivors' interviews. In search of his identity, he confronts his psychological dilemma typical of the young generation of Japan – wanting to connect, but afraid of connecting.

Statement

2 former high school friends drive from Canada to Mexico as they visit atomic bomb survivors from Hiroshima and Nagasaki that live in the States. During the trip, they record the piece of a modern history crucially important in Japanese collective psyche while exploring their own identities and revealing the reality of psychological scars.

México/Japão, 2010, 73 min, legenda espanhol  Produção Shinpei Takeda e Eiji Wkamatsu Classificação indicativa 10 anos Menção honrosa 2013 Para uma geração mais nova de japoneses, as experiências da bomba atômica podem ser verdadeiramente entendidas? Como é que esta memória permanece viva nas próximas gerações? Dois jovens dirigiram ao longo da costa oeste americana, visitando 18 sobreviventes da bomba atômica, bem como um sobrevivente do Holocausto, onde eles revelaram os momentos mais íntimos de suas vidas e a natureza cruel de cicatrizes psicológicas. Com a vasta paisagem do oeste americano em seu backgraound, os dois refletem sobre sua relação com a história contemporânea do Japão. O primeiro longa-metragem de Shinpei Iakeda, diretor residente no México, que tem...