Showing posts with label animal cruelty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animal cruelty. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 November 2025

The Alaska Story / アラスカ物語 / Arasuka monogatari (1977)

Obscure Japanese Film #228

Kinya Kitaoji

This Toho production was based on a 1974 novel* by Jiro Nitta (1912-80), who also supplied the source material for the previously-reviewed Mount Hakkoda, another big movie shot on rugged locations and released the same year. Nitta’s novel was itself based on the life of Frank Yasuda (1868-1958), sometimes dubbed the ‘Japanese Moses.’ Yasuda emigrated to the USA as a young man and served on the USS Bear, a coast guard vessel which became entrapped in ice off the coast of Alaska in 1893. Sent to get help, he walked a vast distance before eventually collapsing, then was rescued by some Inuit in the nick of time. They sent a party to the aid of his shipmates, but Yasuda decided to remain with the Inuit and was taken under the wing of a man named Amaohka, who taught him whaling and hunting. Yasuda ended up marrying Amaohka’s daughter, Nebiro. However, when food became scarce in the area, Yasuda hooked up with Thomas Carter, an American gold prospector, hoping to strike it rich and make enough to lead his adoptive people to a better land (hence the ‘Japanese Moses’ moniker)…


Kyoko Mitsubayashi


Adapted for the screen by Masato Ide (known for his work with Kurosawa), the film follows Yasuda’s story quite closely, but throws in some fictional scenes to spice up the drama, such as the rather absurd but highly entertaining one in which a pack of wolves try to break into Yasuda’s cabin while his wife’s trying to give birth. There was an opportunity to make a more thoughtful, serious film here, but what we get is a disappointingly superficial entertainment. The director, Hiromichi Horikawa, was a former assistant to Kurosawa who made at least two very good films, The Lost Alibi (1960) and Shiro to kuro (1963), but failed to live up to that early promise.


Joe Shishido


Having said that, The Alaska Story was by no means a chore to sit through and remains worth a look for its breathtaking locations shot by cinematographer Kozo Okazaki, who worked with many of Japan’s top directors. Masaru Sato’s elaborate score is also inspired at times. Leading man Kinya Kitaoji was likely cast for his physical toughness and endurance rather than acting ability, but he’s adequate anyway. The only other Japanese character is played by Joe Shishido, who steals the show here as the forthright George Oshima, Yasuda’s real-life friend, who seems to have been a sort of wandering lone adventurer. Other well-known Japanese actors appear as Inuit, including Eiji Okada as Amaohka, Kyoko Mitsubayashi as Nebiro, and Hideo Gosha favourite Isao Natsuyagi, while Tetsuro Tanba pops up as a Native American chief – and I must say he does look the part! But the real star of this film is nature herself.


Tetsuro Tanba


As usual with Japanese films featuring Western characters (of which there are quite a few), the director appears to have just grabbed the nearest Westerners to fill these roles regardless of acting ability or experience, and they’re mostly terrible. The one honourable exception is William Ross, who plays Tom Carter, and is quite decent. Ross was an American who emigrated to Japan and found work in the film industry in many capacities, but basically whenever a gaijin was needed.


William Ross


Those who enjoy tales of real-life adventure may well enjoy this film, but a word of warning for animal-lovers – it looks like Kitaoji killed a seal for real in one scene, and there’s also a sequence featuring a whale hunt which I don’t think was faked. As the British Board of Film Censors prohibits such scenes, I suspect that this is the reason why the film has had no UK release that I know of.


* An English translation was published in 1980 as An Alaskan Tale


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Friday, 17 March 2023

Under the Northern Lights / Pod severnym siyaniyem / オーロラの下で (1990)

Obscure Japanese Film #50

Koji Yakusho


For some reason, IMDb credits three directors on this film, although the film’s own credits list only Toshio Goto as director. I suspect that Sergey Vronski, a cinematographer, shot some second unit footage and Petras Abukiavicus, who co-wrote the screenplay, directed the Russian actors.


Thursday, 9 July 2020

The Old Bear Hunter / Matagi (1982)

Obscure Japanese Film #3



A film from 1982 about an old hunter trying to kill an especially large and vicious black bear sounds likely to be another schlocky Jaws rip-off in the manner of Grizzly (1976). However, the story actually owes more to Moby-Dick in that Heizo, the hunter in question, was attacked by the bear some years previously and left with a bad facial scar as a result. As played by Ko Nishimura, he seems too level-headed to seek revenge on an animal for this reason alone, but further motivation is provided as the film progresses. One of the many surprising things about The Old Bear Hunter is that the thinness of the plot turns out to be something of an asset, providing a decent enough excuse for a film which is as much a fascinating portrait of the little-known matagi as it is an adventure movie.

The matagi, traditional hunters often accompanied by specially-trained Akita dogs, have been active in northern Honshu for over 400 years hunting bear and other game. They consider these as gifts from the mountain gods, and are careful not to waste any part of the animal or kill more than they need.

The film opens with a sequence on a snow-covered mountainside in which a bear is shot dead and the hide removed. This appears to have been done for real, and The Old Bear Hunter is certainly a problematic film for animal lovers. As in the case of the kangaroo hunt in the Australian film Wake in Fright, the filmmakers perhaps attempted to justify this scene by saying that the hunt was not staged specifically for them, and they simply received permission to film a hunt that was going to happen anyway. In any case, it certainly lends the picture a remarkable degree of authenticity. Even more uncomfortable to watch are the scenes of Heizo training his Akita – he slashes at it with a bear claw, force-feeds it bear meat smeared with big dollops of bear fat, and even dons an entire bear hide before attacking the hapless dog. Worse still, there is a sequence featuring a matagi dog-training competition in which a number of Akita are forced to attack a chained bear. This scene goes on for some time and there is clearly no fakery involved. However, if one can get past the brutality of these sequences, this is a thoroughly absorbing and extremely well-made film.

This is also a film which shows, rather than tells, and is therefore light on dialogue, something which works very much in its favour. Director Toshio Goto makes full use of his snow-laden, mountainous locations to often breathtaking effect, and the fact that nothing appears to have been shot in a studio lends a sense of documentary-like realism, while the esoteric details about bear bile, etc, suggest that the ways of the matagi were thoroughly researched in advance. Goto also skillfully manages to avoid lapsing into melodrama and, when the climactic battle between old man and bear finally arrives, it’s not only entirely convincing, but steers well clear of the sense of triumphant revenge found in many ‘bad animal’ movies.

The Old Bear Hunter was Goto’s first film as director. Born in 1938, he worked as an assistant director under Satsuo Yamamoto in the ‘70s. On IMDb, his filmography has been mistakenly merged with another Toshio Goto who worked as an editor on some of Kurosawa’s early films. However, the fact that he subsequently made a Russian-Japanese co-production set in the wilderness of Sibera entitled Pod Severnym Siyaniyem / Under Aurora immediately brings to mind Kurosawa’s 1975 film Dersu Uzala.

As Heizo, the diminutive Ko Nishimura is miscast in a role that would have been better suited to a more physically powerful actor such as Toshiro Mifune (perhaps Mifune turned it down). Considering this, he does very well in the part and deserves respect for taking on what must have been a physically arduous role at the age of 59. Nishimura made over 200 movies beginning in 1953, and will be a familiar face to most Japanese film fans, popping up as he does in parts large and small in such classics as Sword of Doom and Red Beard.

If it were not for the scenes of animal cruelty, I would wholeheartedly recommend this film to anyone.