Description |
1 online resource (1 video file) : sound, color |
Summary |
No one could have ever imagined the absurd fate awaiting Mirror's Quest and the other horses of Fukushima: almost dying in the tsunami; exposed to radiation inside the 20km exclusion zone surrounding the nuclear meltdown; left for weeks without fodder; shut away in stables for months because of government red tape. A third-generation rancher, Mr. Tanaka, had 40 horses within the 20km radius of the nuclear plant. In March 2011, he was forced to evacuate immediately after the nuclear accident, and had to abandon the horses. Only some weeks later was he permitted to re-enter the restricted zone, to find many horses starved to death and others suffering from trauma and disease. The horses had been bred and trained to participate in the spectacular annual horse festival of the Fukushima area, Soma Nomaoi, which celebrates the contribution of horses to human society, as partners in warfare and farming. It is a festival with a proud and celebrated 1,000-year history, but now the horses have become a headache for the authorities. A horse meat industry flourishes nearby because horse meat is considered a gourmet delicacy in Japan. Ironically, however, thanks to the nuclear disaster, these horses will be allowed to live out the full span of their lives, without any likelihood of being slaughtered for food as they grow older. Among the many Fukushima films emerging from the disaster, this project alone does not "explain." The horses cannot speak, and the filmmaker does not anthropomorphise them. The audience is gradually drawn into their world of discovering how simple and beautiful it is to eat, to run, to live. The name of the horse festival, Soma Nomaoi, literally means "chasing wild horses." Chasing and harnessing the wild - perhaps that is what humans have done throughout the history of civilization. This is Matsubayashi's second film in Fukushima, following FUKUSHIMA: MEMORIES OF THE LOST LANDSCAPE |
Analysis |
Asian and Middle Eastern Studies |
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Environmental Sciences |
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Politics and International Affairs |
Notes |
Originally produced by Ronin Films in 2013 |
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In Japanese with English subtitles |
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Description based on on line resource; title from title frames (Kanopy, viewed January 17, 2023) |
Subject |
Horses -- Japan -- Fukushima-ken
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Festivals -- Japan -- Fukushima-ken
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Fukushima Nuclear Disaster, Japan, 2011.
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Streaming video.
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Internet videos.
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streaming video.
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Streaming video
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Internet videos
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Genre/Form |
documentary film.
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Internet videos
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Internet videos.
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Documentary films.
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Vidéos sur Internet.
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Documentaires.
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Form |
Streaming video
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Author |
Yōju, Matsubayashi, filmmaker
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