The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom

2011
The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom
7.7| 0h39m| en| More Info
Released: 12 September 2011 Released
Producted By:
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: http://thetsunamiandthecherryblossom.com/
Synopsis

On 11 March 2011, an earthquake caused a tsunami to hit the Tōhoku (Northeast) region of Japan. In this film, survivors of the tsunami rebuild as cherry blossom season begins. The film is a stunning visual haiku about the ephemeral nature of life–and of the healing power of Japan's most beloved flower.

... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Cast

Director

Producted By

Trailers & Images

  • Top Credited Cast
  • |
  • Crew

Reviews

Horst in Translation ([email protected]) "The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom" is an American documentary and the second work by writer and director Lucy Walker. Despite the title, this one is exclusively in the Japanese language, so you may want to get a good set of subtitles unless you speak that one. It runs for 39 minutes, but there is an extended version that i watched and this one runs for over 50 minutes. There is basically a clean cut in this film just like there is in the title. A bit over the first half is about the horrible tsunami that killed thousands of people and killed even more people's hopes, while the second half focuses on the beauty and meaning of cherry blossoms. Obviously the latter is seen as some kind of symbol for hope and revival after the tragic events and I must say this kind of metaphor really only works partially. Of course you should not expect this film to seek for solutions and ways to keep events like this from happening in the future, but it's really more about the simple people and their way back to some kind of happiness that obviously does not include scientific studies at all. So yeah, it is an okay documentary that includes some touching interviews early on, but despite the beautiful looks of the blossoms, the movie gets considerably weaker in the second half and almost feels a bit pretentious. Still overall, I give it a thumbs-up, but I guess the Oscar nomination (losing to "Saving Face") may have been a bit too much.
evening1 Sure, it's pretty obvious Western culture is different from Japan's. Just take a look around from any perspective.But where we diverge the most may flow not from outward discrepancies but from a philosophical point of view. While the Judeo-Christian perspective focuses on the choices of the individual, Buddhism encourages a holistic view. On 3/11 -- the day in 2011 that Japan's worst-ever earthquake struck, triggering a 110-foot tsunami -- nature unleashed a horrific fury, killing 20,000 people and laying waste to expanses of the eastern sea coast. Then, a month or two later, Japan's storied cherry blossoms started poking from their buds, offering succor and hope to a traumatized population.If "sakura" inundated in salt water can return to the business of life, then so can we, says a white-haired man who spends daylight with his wife, seated in front of their rubble-reduced home, and night hours asleep in a community center.This brief documentary begins with a shocking and lengthy stretch of home video that shows a vast black river of debris swallowing up frenzied scrambling dots (people) and all manner of man-made construction. The second half of the film focuses on the Japanese people's reverence for the delicate pink flower whose blossoming they mark in a 10-step progression. Death comes to the bloom within days of its birth, a call to love and revere the gifts of nature before they disappear. There is a transience in life that is always there, though we, especially here in the West, prefer not to look in that direction.There is an amazing sequence in this film in which a seller of cherry trees, whose family has been in the business for 16 generations, discusses the duality of nature. His wise words are as unexpected as they are eloquent.This film may make you cry. And wake you up.
dy158 There is always something searing about raw footages from natural disasters. It is always the survivors and/or those who just happened to witness it are the ones recording the very nature of what happens when Mother Nature destructs. We are the only the bystanders shocked at what we see from the news, they are the ones who first saw it up close.Or in this case, the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami which hit Japan, and the local residents recording raw footages from afar, but still able to witness the impending destruction of their hometown. It really hits home for them when they realised they are actually about to witness their hometown being destroyed by the impending tsunami, from the raw footages with the locals speaking of their reactions which opened this documentary as produced by Kira Carstensen and directed by documentary filmmaker Lucy Walker.The documentary complements with locals speaking how the tsunami affects them, along with ordinary Japanese young and old on what the cherry blossom means to them. Spring time is usually a time of admiring cherry blossoms in Japan, but that particular year's cherry blossom season has an added tinge of poignancy with the cameras in one scene showing a sign in a Tokyo park reminding residents of observing sensitivity to those affected by the earthquake and tsunami.While one cannot help but be amazed at how ordinary Japanese view the cherry blossom and what it says of the Japanese psyche in especially during those times, it is especially those hardest hit by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami that their stories really hits you. It really stood out for me personally on how the cameras would pan the images of photographs, in the midst of what the destruction had left behind – the human cost. Photographs of a couple getting married, of two school friends…whether the owners to those photographs are alive, nobody knows.We are often being told how Mother Nature can be destructive when she wants to be, but in such moments we may have forgotten the beauty of what she has left behind in this world as well, as depicted by the ordinary Japanese who spoke on the documentary reflecting on the cherry blossom season with the added tinge of the nature of destruction Mother Nature had left behind back in March 2011.
Indie Friendlie We here at Indie Friendlie.com watched this incredible documentary from director Lucy Walker with great anticipation, and we were not disappointed.The film is heart-wrenching, difficult at times, but ultimately inspiring in its very intimate portraits of those whose lives were forever changed by the recent tsunami in Japan.Lucy Walker also co-directed the documentary "Waste Land", which was shot in Brooklyn and Brazil over 3 years. "The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom" and "Waste Land" show her ability to capture incredibly personal moments of courage in a vast landscape of adversity. In Japan, she did this with survivors of the tsunami, and in Brazil she did it again with that country's most impoverished. Awards and recognition for "The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom" are well-deserved. Definitely worth watching.