• Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
MySite
  • Newly Released
  • Popular
  • Actors
My Favorites ❤️

Services
BrandingDesignMarketingAdvertisement
Company
About usContactJobsPress kit
Social
Movie 1

Children of Hiroshima

1952-08-06
97 minutes
DramaWar
7.1

Shows the devastation caused by the atomic bomb, and by use of a fictional storyline, portrays the struggle of the ordinary Japanese people in dealing with the aftermath.

Country : JapanLanguage : ja

Cast:

Movie 1

Nobuko Otowa

Takako Ishikawa

Movie 1

Osamu Takizawa

Iwakichi

Movie 1

Masao Shimizu

Toshiaki

Movie 1

Jūkichi Uno

Kōji (deleted scenes; cenas apagadas)

Similer Movies:

Movie 1
Romance
Drama
Adventure

Tabu: A Story of the South Seas

Movie 1
Horror
Drama
Thriller

The Seventh Sign

Movie 1
Drama
Horror

The Mummy Lives

Movie 1
Movie 1

Akira Yamanouchi

(as Akira Yamauchi; como Akira Yamauchi)

Movie 1

Jun Tatara

Movie 1

Tsutomu Shimomoto

Natsue Morikawa's husband (Marido da Natsue Morikawa)

Movie 1

Hideji Ōtaki

Movie 1

Eiken Shoji

Movie 1

Shinsuke Ashida

Science Fiction
Drama

RED

Movie 1
Drama
War

Dunkirk

Movie 1
Drama

Pepe El Toro

TMDP Top Reviews:

CinemaSerf

It's been six years since teacher "Takako Ishiwaka" (Nobuko Otowa) lost her parents in the Hiroshima blast and she is now planning on returning to the city to visit friends and to remember her family. On arrival, she stays with "Natsue Morikawa" (Miwa Saitô) who has been rendered infertile by the toxic after-effects of the explosion. This is where this emotionally heart-rending story starts. She explores what's left of the city only to discover that in many areas, a remarkable regeneration has occurred. In others, though, people are living an hand-to-mouth existence and that includes her father's former colleague "Iwakichi" (Osamu Takizawa) who is all but blind and living amongst the ruins whilst his grandchild lives in a nearby orphanage. She is informed that a few of her own fellow school pupils have also survived and so visits them - providing director Kaneto Shindô with an opportunity to present us with three different examples of post-war life and of the resignation, stoicism and maybe even slight optimism of those starting to rebuild - whilst they all turn nervously to the sky when they hear an aircraft overhead. Accompanied by some flashbacks to happier times, this tells a touching story of people whose lives, and in many cases beliefs, have been utterly destroyed. Their infrastructure is gone - physically and psychologically, yet she epitomises a decency and the imagery cannot help but engender a sense of pity from anyone watching. No, it doesn't put this into any form of context with the abhorrent behaviour of the troops who fought in their name elsewhere, so no real attempt is made to politicise the situation. It's more a series of personal tales that do quite succinctly bring home the true horrors of the original weapon of mass destruction and of human resilience.