Jun Hamamura

Jun Hamamura

  • Born: 1906-2-7
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Lorna 2022-01-20 08:03:36

      [Superior front seat] Japanese soldiers staying in Southeast Asia

      "The Burmese Harp" (ビルマの風琴/The Burmese Harp) is one of Ichikawa Kun’s most famous works. It talks about a group of Japanese soldiers who were in Myanmar before the defeat and surrender. The captain played by Rentaro of the Three Kingdoms was a music teacher before joining the army. Mizushima has...

    • Reggie 2022-01-20 08:03:36

      A thin body beating a great heart

      Half a semester has passed since I went to an elective course in college. I have watched 6 movies in total, including Nihon Kokaku Centenary (documentary), Rashomon, Tokyo Monogatari, Yugetsu Monogatari, Ichikawa Kun Monogatari (documentary) and Today Watch The finished Burmese harp.

      They are all...

    • Trycia 2022-04-20 09:02:25

      Ichikawa Kun//I cared about being alive before, and then respected death. The whole film does not criticize the Japanese aggression, but let you understand their behavior from an individual, and respect the death caused by the individual's ignorance. Aside from those who do not surrender, it is worth affirming the humanitarianism of personal mourning for the defeat of the injustice in the war. In this war, the Japanese army of the aggressor fought the British army of the colonizer, and there was no justice. You can still remember it yourself. . If in China, that would be outrageous.

    • Chance 2022-04-19 09:02:44

      He is one of the few people in his ethnic group who has relatively the most profound reflection. What this work brings to people is not only the things on the screen, but also...

    The Burmese Harp quotes

    • Subtitles: [Last lines] The soil of Burma is red, and so are its rocks!

    • Captain Inouye: [Excerpt from Mizushima's letter, which Captain Inouye reads to his men as they sail back to Japan] As I climbed mountains and crossed streams, burying the bodies left in the grasses and streams, my heart was wracked with questions. Why must the world suffer such misery? Why must there be such inexplicable pain? As the days passed, I came to understand. I realized that, in the end, the answers were not for human beings to know, that our work is simply to ease the great suffering of the world. To have the courage to face suffering, senselessness and irrationality without fear, to find the strength to create peace by one's own example. I will undergo whatever training is necessary for this to become my unshakable conviction.