70 minutes / Color
English; Japanese / English subtitles
Release: 2006
Copyright: 2005
In 2005, sixty years after the end of World War II, a conservative Japanese government is pressing ahead with plans to revise the nation's constitution and jettison its famous no-war clause, Article 9. This timely, hard-hitting documentary places the ongoing debate over the constitution in an international context: What will revision mean to Japan's neighbors, Korea and China? How has the US-Japan military alliance warped the constitution and Japan's role in the world? How is the unprecedented involvement of Japan's Self-Defense Force in the occupation of Iraq perceived in the Middle East?
Through interviews conducted with leading thinkers around the world, the film explores the origins of the Constitution in the ashes of war, and the significance of its peace clauses in the conflicted times of the early 21st century.
Key interviews include:
"Evokes courage and provokes thought. It should be seen by all generations."—Okinawa Times
"Recommended!"—Educational Media Reviews Online
"Powerful!"—Professor Peter Frost, Williams College, for Education About Asia
"Rather than appealing to emotion, it is a film made with faith in human reason."—Ronza Magazine
"Simply watching it makes one feel you have come closer to a world of peace."—Ryukyu Shimpo
"The thoughts of those interviewed bring into sharp focus the world's expectations of the absolute pacifism of the Constitution and its significance in the history of humanity."—Shinano Mainichi
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