A Bitter
Legacy is a documentary film which premiered in 2016. The topic is the
internment of the Japanese-Americans during World War Two. Here is some basic
information about this film:
** Director:
Claudia Katayanagi
** Language:
English
** Available on
Blu-ray disc and via Amazon Prime Video
** Run time: ca.
75 minutes
The film is
divided into three sections:
** PART ONE is
short. It runs for ca. five minutes. This part covers the Japanese-Americans
during the time before World War Two: the four decades from 1900 to the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941.
** PART TWO is
the main part of the film. It runs for ca. 60 minutes. This part covers the
Japanese-Americans during World War Two when many of them (more than 100,000)
were placed in internment camps: the time from 1942 to 1946.
** PART THREE is
short. It runs for ca. 10 minutes. This part covers the Japanese-Americans
during the time after the end of World War Two: from 1945-1946 to the beginning
of the twenty-first century.
Many persons are
interviewed in this film. They can be divided into two groups:
# 1. In the
first group we have several Japanese-Americans who were young children or
teenagers during the war when they were sent to the camps. Japanese-Americans
who were adults during the war are no longer alive. I will not mention the
names here, because the list is too long.
# 2. In the
second group we have some academic experts, mostly historians, who have studied
this topic and who have written books and articles about it. I will mention all
names here, because the list is not too long. For each name (except one) I will add the
title of a book that is relevant:
** Roger
Daniels, author of Prisoners without Trial: Japanese-Americans in World War II
(1993, second edition 2004)
** Arthur A.
Hansen, author of Manzanar Martyr: An Interview with Harry Ueno (1986)
** Tetsuden
Kashima, author of Judgment without Trial: Japanese-American Imprisonment
during World War II (1995)
** Eric L.
Muller, author of American Inquisition: The Hunt for Japanese-American
Disloyalty in World War II (2007)
** Greg
Robinson, author of By Order of the President: FDR and the Internment of
Japanese-Americans (2001)
** Eileen
Tamura, author of In Defense of Justice: Joseph Kurihara and the
Japanese-American Struggle for Equality (2013)
** Wayne Merrill
Collins, attorney, is the son of attorney Wayne Mortimer Collins (1899-1974)
who worked on several cases related to the internment of the Japanese-Americans
When these
people give their statements, we see them, but this film is more than talking
heads. We see them, but not the whole time. After a while, the faces disappear and the account is illustrated by old photos of the people or the
places they are talking about and by historical documents or reports from which
they are quoting.
In other words:
the film offers evidence which supplements and supports the statements made by these people.
What do
reviewers say about this film?
On IMDb it has a rating of 84 per
cent, which corresponds to a rating of 4.2 stars on Amazon.
On Amazon there are nine ratings, four with reviews. The average rating is five stars (100 percent).
Here are the headlines of the four reviews:
** Disturbing and true
** Learned some new things
** An important documentary
** Everyone needs to see this
I understand the positive reviews and I agree with them.
Why?
(1) This film is a
work of art.
(2) The topic is covered very well and in great detail.
(3) The people who
are interviewed are well-chosen:
** The Japanese-Americans have interesting and remarkable stories to tell.
** The academic
experts explain the legal and the political aspects of the internment in clear
language that is easy to understand.
I want to go all
the way to the top with this product. I think it deserves a rating of five
stars (100 percent).
PS # 1. The film
includes a dramatic clip from the 1976 television movie Farewell to Manzanar,
based on the book Farewell to Manzanar which was published in 1973.
This book is
written by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston (born 1934) and her husband James D.
Houston (1933-2009).
PS # 2. Some important vocabulary: three Japanese words which are often used in connection
with this topic:
** ISSEI = The
first generation, born in Japan, immigrated to the US, usually before 1914. The
law does not allow them to become citizens. Most members of this group speak
only Japanese.
The US
authorities does not trust this group. They suspect that many of them are loyal
to the Japanese emperor.
** NISEI = The
second generation, born in the US, usually between the two world wars, and
therefore citizens of the US. Most members of this group are fluent in Japanese
and English.
The US
authorities tend to trust this group. They regard most of them as loyal US citizens.
** KIBEI = Also the
second generation, also born in the US, usually between the two world wars, and
therefore also citizens of the US. When they were teenagers, their parents sent
them to Japan to study Japanese language and culture. Once they had completed
their studies, they returned to the US. Most members of this group are fluent in
Japanese and English.
The US
authorities do not trust this group. They suspect that many of them are loyal
to the Japanese emperor. They are seen as troublemakers.
PS # 3. The
following interview with the director is available online: California Film
Institute, Interview with A Bitter Legacy’s Claudia Katayanagi, 29 March 2017.
*****
Farewell to Manzanar
(first published 1973)
(reprinted 1983 and 2017)
*****