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So Long Asleep
Secondary Title:
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: Waking the Ghosts of a War
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Filmmaker Name:
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David Plath
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Film Length:
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60 min
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Film Year:
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2016
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Duration:
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46-75 min
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Decade:
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2010s
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Language:
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in English, Korean and Japanese
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Subtitle Language:
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with English subtitles
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Color:
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color
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Closed-captioned:
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closed-captioned
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Thanks to books and films such as Unbroken and Bridge Over the River Kwai many Americans know that Imperial Japan forced Allied military prisoners to perform heavy labor during the Asia-Pacific War. Few also know that hordes of Asian civilian men suffered the same treatment.
For seven decades the governments of Japan and Korea have sparred over who is responsible for the dead souls of Empire's children.
A chance encounter between a Japanese Buddhist priest and a Korean graduate student sparked a bi-national people-power project that for 20 years has been locating and retrieving the remains of Korean laborers who died in Hokkaido, Japan's large northern island. On the 70th anniversary of the end of the war, project volunteers carried 115 sets of remains on a controversial pilgrimage through Japan's major cities en route to a contested reburial in Seoul's Municipal Cemetery.
So Long Asleep takes us to visit the excavation sites, and then we travel with the volunteers on their pilgrimage.
Project co-leader Yoshihiko Tonohira, chief priest of a rural temple in western Hokkaido, was born after the war; he learned only years later that there were Korean laborers buried in his region. He began to locate them, cremate them, and provide memorial services for them.
Co-leader Byung-Ho Chung was in Japan doing fieldwork for his doctoral dissertation when he happened to visit Tonohira's temple and learned of the excavations. He promised to return with a crew of Korean students and anthropologists trained to excavate while preserving evidence of causes of death.
Together they launched a series of workshops that stand on a hurtful past to build a hopeful future. Volunteers, most of them students, come to Hokkaido for a fortnight: Japanese, Koreans, zainichi offspring of Korean migrants in Japan, plus others from elsewhere.
During the day, supervised by forensic anthropologists, they clear away foliage and dig for remains. At night they meet to build a community of mutual respect that can stay the new waves of ethnic and nationalist rancor washing across East Asia. Participants speak of the life-changing power of witnessing with others the evidence of historic hatred.
So Long Asleep is an uplifting report on what engaged citizens can accomplish when their governments drift away from attending to duty.
SELECTED SCREENINGS & AWARDS
Award of Merit, Impact Docs, 2018
Bronze Award, Spotlight Documentary Film Awards, 2017
Margaret Mead Film Festival, 2017
Cinema Soup Film Festival, 2018
Ogeechee International History Film Festival, 2018
MayDay Film Festival, 2018
So Long Asleep, Waking the Ghosts of a War
Producer/Director
David W Plath
Director of Photography
Colleen Cook
Second Camera/Media Manager
Isaac Napell
Additional Footage
Song Ki-Chan
Location Assistants
Song Ki-Chan
Yamamoto Yuji
Online Editor
William Yauch, Rielly Boy Prodctions
Offline Editor
David W Plath
Editorial Advisor
Jacquetta Hill
Transcriber/Translators
Chung Ga-Young
Matsushita Hiromi
Shin Jeongsu
Xie Yiqing
Extended Screening History
Midwest Conference on Asian Affairs, 2016
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2016
University of Chicago, 2016 University of Pittsburgh, 2017
University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2017
Annual meetings of the Association for Asian Studies, Toronto, 2017
University of Missouri - St. Louis, 2017
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