Japanische Soldaten des Teufels

2001

Japanese Devils (or Riben Guizi 日本鬼子 ) is a Japanese documentary about the war crimes committed by the Imperial Japanese Army between 1931 and 1945.[1] The documentary is a series of interviews with 14 Japanese veterans of the Second Sino-Japanese War who recount rape, massacres, bio-experiments, and cannibalism. The accuracy of these interviews is contested by Japanese nationalist critics.

Minoru Matsui's inspiration for the film came after one of his original interviewees died. Feeling that it was his last chance to document the stories, he began the process of creating the documentary. Initial support was minimal, with all production companies showing no interest. The film did not gain any traction until it was entered into the Berlin Film Festival.[2]

The original title, Riben Guizi, is a Chinese phrase popular in the 1930s and 1940s used to express hatred for Japanese invaders.[1]

Quelle: Wikipedia(englisch)
Kinostart:2001
weitere Titel:
日本鬼子:日中15年战争·原皇军士兵的告白zh-hans
日本鬼子:日中15年戰爭·原皇軍士兵的告白zh-hant zh-hk zh
日本鬼子
Japanese Devils
Japanische Soldaten des Teufels
Genre:Dokumentarfilm
Herstellungsland:Japan
Originalsprache:Japanisch
Farbe:Farbe
IMDB: 138
Darsteller:Yoshio Tsuchiya
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Rezensionen:

2001
Festróia - Tróia International Film Festival
Costa Azul Award
Gewinner
Datenstand: 14.08.2022 18:08:19Uhr