Showing posts with label Submersion of Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Submersion of Japan. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

New Q&A on Vantage Point Interviews with a Showa-Era Superstar!

Kaoru Yumi in March 2023. Photo by Brett Homenick.

Vantage Point Interviews is proud to present my interview with the legendary actress Kaoru Yumi, star of such Toho tokusatsu epics as The Last Days of Planet Earth (a.k.a. Prophecies of Nostradamus, 1974) and Espy (1974), as well as the Submersion of Japan (1974-75) TV show. The interview was conducted during two separate sessions in March 2023 and November 2023, and it covers a variety of topics regarding Ms. Yumi's career. Some photos from those sessions, which have never been published until now, are also contained within this blog post. Enjoy!



Kaoru Yumi in November 2023. Photo by Brett Homenick.



Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Former Godzilla Series SFX Director Teruyoshi Nakano Passes Away at Age 86

Teruyoshi Nakano in August 2017. Photo by Brett Homenick.

The Japanese news media are reporting that longtime Toho special effects director Teruyoshi Nakano passed away on June 27 of sepsis. He was 86.

Teruyoshi Nakano with director Kazuki Omori in October 2017. Photo by Brett Homenick. 

Born in what is now Dandong, China, on October 9, 1935, Mr. Nakano repatriated to Japan shortly after the war and attended Nihon University College of Art's film department. He later joined Toho in 1959, intending to become a film director. However, he was moved over to the tokusatsu side of filmmaking and quickly moved up the ranks, becoming chief assistant director under Eiji Tsuburaya by 1963.

SFX directors Teruyoshi Nakano and Eiichi Asada team up to sing "Godzilla and Jet Jaguar: Punch! Punch! Punch!" from Godzilla vs. Megalon (1973) in October 2015. Photo by Brett Homenick.

In 1969, Mr. Nakano would serve as special effects director on his first film, The Crazy Cats’ Big Explosion. Mr. Nakano would direct the special effects on every Godzilla film between Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster (1971) and Godzilla 1985 (1984). He earned critical acclaim for his special effects work in Submersion of Japan (1973).

Teruyoshi Nakano poses with the posters of two of his most famous works in April 2015. Photo by Brett Homenick.

I really can't find the words to express what a devastating loss this is. It might even be possible to say I've visited him in the last 10 years more than any other Toho figure. He was always very approachable and friendly at any gathering he attended.

Teruyoshi Nakano strikes a familiar pose in June 2017. Photo by Brett Homenick.

While he started using a cane in recent years, he still seemed completely healthy, especially for a gentleman his age. That all seemed to change this year. Earlier this year, one of my Japanese friends showed me a photo taken of Mr. Nakano in his hospital bed.

Two heroes for the price of one: Teruyoshi Nakano in August 2017. Photo by Brett Homenick.

Apparently, he had just spent about a month there but had recently been discharged. Despite the shocking photo, I was assured that he was doing much better, so there was no need to worry. But I did.

Teruyoshi Nakano poses for a photo at a memorial event for Koichi Kawakita at Toho Studios in February 2015. Photo by Brett Homenick.

I wanted to believe it, but I couldn't. And now I know there was good reason not to believe it. I'll really miss Mr. Nakano's presence at future events. I tried my best to interview him in recent years, but he told me that he wanted to wait until after COVID to do it.

Teruyoshi Nakano plays around with his old colleague Zone Fighter in September 2017. Photo by Brett Homenick.

While I had the privilege of interviewing him twice in 2004 (which, strangely, I believe turned out to be his final appearance in the U.S.), I felt those interviews never did Mr. Nakano justice and wanted to do something much more in-depth. I wish it could have worked out.

Teruyoshi Nakano, Takashi Naganuma, and director Kensho Yamashita pose with a poster for Battle of Okinawa (1971) in July 2016. Photo by Brett Homenick.

There's so much to say, but I'll end with this. A few years ago, as Nakano-san and I were posing for a photo, we shook hands, and he said (in English), "Family." That's certainly how I felt.

Rest in peace, Mr. Nakano. Thank you so much for your work, your time, and your kindness.

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Did the Star of 'Alien' Dub a Tokusatsu Movie?

In space, no one can hear you loop!

The 1979 Ridley Scott film Alien is widely considered a sci-fi classic, which has spawned a long-running series of movies. For fans of tokusatsu movies, it turns out that there's a connection between Alien and one of the most celebrated Japanese disaster flicks of all time, Submersion of Japan (1973).

Well, maybe not Submersion of Japan per se but rather its American release, Tidal Wave (1975). According to one of the voice actors who worked on the film, Tom Skerritt (who plays Dallas in Alien) dubs Hiroshi Fujioka's character in the New World Pictures version. The timing actually makes sense, too, as Skerritt was fresh off playing Fred Diller in the Roger Corman-produced Big Bad Mama (1974). (Corman owned New World Pictures at the time.) 

This information comes courtesy of an unlikely source: an article by film critic Peter Rainer in the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, dated August 29, 1985. In his column "Peter Rainer on Film," the critic recounts his experience dubbing a couple of small parts in Tidal Wave after reviewing Godzilla 1985 (1984). The review was published under the headline "Return of 'Godzilla' — and Raymond Burr: His presence makes the '1985' version." (For those curious, his Godzilla 1985 review is mostly negative and condescending.)

In the article, Rainer writes the following concerning Tidal Wave:

Tom Skerritt — just the sort of laid-back SoCal beachfront kind of guy you'd expect to dub a Japanese — was the lead voice. 

I was given a couple of different characters to dub — a bathysphere technician and an office boy — and I also dubbed in a long stretch of narration. (I also dubbed crowd screams; in other words, three or four of us stood around in a circle and hollered the same lines over and over while, on the screen, a building collapsed onto a phalanx of unfortunates.) 

Describing his own experience dubbing the film, he writes:

There I stood before the mike with my script in hand, listening for the aural cue (a beep tone) to begin the dub job. My bathysphere technician is saying something simple, like "It's a nice day, Akiko, don't you think?" and I'm not even close. I sound constipated. After a half-dozen trials, I manage to at least finish the line at the same time as the guy up there on the screen, and it's on to the next line. Dubbing is a line-by-line process. At least it was with me.

Among many other credits, Tom Skerritt plays Duke Forrest in MASH (1970), Viper in Top Gun (1986), Sheriff Jimmy Brock in the TV series Picket Fences (1992-96), and David Drumlin in Contact (1997). 

The relevant portion of Rainer's Godzilla 1985 review, in which he discusses his Tidal Wave memories, is shared below in two parts.


Special thanks to R. J. Kizer for sending me the above article.

Saturday, July 17, 2021

Eiichi Asada Q&A on Vantage Point Interviews!


My March 2021 interview Toho SFX director Eiichi Asada has been posted on Vantage Point Interviews. The interview covers his early career as an assistant director on Godzilla vs. Megalon (1973), Submersion of Japan (1973), Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla (1974), and Espy (1974). Asada-san, of course, would go on to be SFX director on Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S. (2003) and Godzilla: Final Wars (2004). 

As you ought to know by now, content is king on Vantage Point Interviews

Monday, May 31, 2021

Eizo Yamagiwa Q&A Now Up at Vantage Point Interviews!

With Eizo Yamagiwa.

Another brand-new interview is now live at Vantage Point Interviews: my November 2020 Q&A with Tsuburaya Productions director Eizo Yamagiwa. Yamagiwa-san discusses his early life during World War II, as well as his start at Shintoho in the mid-1950s. At Shintoho, he worked on the seventh Starman actioner Super Giant: The Space Mutant Appears (1958), which was later edited into the cult classic Evil Brain from Outer Space.

At the end of the 1960s, Yamagiwa-san joined Tsuburaya Productions as a director, helming such TV programs as Return of Ultraman (1971-72), Ultraman Ace (1972-73), Ultraman Taro (1973-74), and Ultraman Leo (1974-75), among others. He also directed episodes of Silver Kamen (1971-72) and the Submersion of Japan TV series (1974-75). Yamagiwa-san discusses these productions and much more in our interview. 

With such incredible, in-depth interviews, Vantage Point Interviews continues to prove that content is king!

Sunday, July 12, 2020

Seeing Submersion of Japan in 35mm!

Toshio Miike, keepin' it safe! Photo by Brett Homenick. 

Today, I attended a screening of a 35mm print of Submersion of Japan (1973), a landmark Toho SFX film. It was my first time to see the movie in 35mm. However, the print was a bit faded and scratchy at several points. Still, it was a revelation to see the film theatrically. Seeing the disaster scenes in such detail was a true joy.


On hand for the event was Heisei-era production designer and art director Toshio Miike. As before, the masks came off just long enough to snap a photo.

I've always enjoyed Submersion, and I'm still surprised it doesn't get much attention in the West. (But a lack of monsters will do that to any SFX film.) It certainly deserves another look.

Keepin' Cool in the Summer Heat with Tokusatsu!

Teruyoshi Nakano. Photo by Brett Homenick.

Although they are a lot more rare these days, last night was a Saturday evening like many others in previous months and years. Former Toho SFX director Teruyoshi Nakano attended a similar event to those he has guested in the past. I think we have to give him a lot of credit for returning, given the current situation.


Naturally, the requisite safety precautions were taken. And my mask only came off long enough for the above photo to be taken. Of course, it was another fun evening, and I had the chance to ask Nakano-san a question, even though I knew there was little chance he'd know the answer.

In my second interview with Shigeo Kato, Kato-san described a scene in Submersion of Japan (1973) that doesn't appear to be in the film at all. He described a scene in a house in which fireballs were dropped on the actors in a fairly dangerous stunt. As predicted, Nakano-san didn't recall it, but since it was filmed on the drama side of the production, it wouldn't have been under his supervision, anyway. Well, it was worth a shot.

Suffice it to say, another great time was had by all. 

Sunday, March 1, 2020

An Evening with a Legendary Cinematographer!

With Daisaku Kimura.

Tonight, I attended an event with legendary Japanese cinematographer Daisaku Kimura, whose credits include several classic Akira Kurosawa movies, as well as tokusatsu greats as Submersion of Japan (1973), Blue Christmas (1978), and Virus (1980). One thing's for sure: Kimura-san certainly doesn't hold back in expressing himself!


It was certainly an enlightening experience. Kimura-san is truly one of the greats of Japanese cinema.

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Riding the Orange Road Express!

In between actor Ichiro Ogura (left) and director Kazuki Omori.

Today, I attended a screening of director Kazuki Omori's first studio film, Orange Road Express (1978), produced by Shochiku. Going into the screening, I knew very little about the film, so I had no idea what to expect.

Kazuki Omori. Photo by Brett Homenick.

The film was quite amusing. It's a comedic (and highly stylized) road picture that centers on an elderly couple that steals cars from random people who try to be Good Samaritans. I didn't know until after the screening that Omori-san drew upon the social upheavals happening in Japan in the late 1960s and early '70s for this movie. Even though the content seems rather tame by contemporary standards, it seems that Orange Road Express was quite revolutionary in its day.


I also found out for the first time that Omori-san directed a commercial for the Lawson chain of convenience stores sometime in the 1990s. I wonder if the commercial dealt with time travel and/or bioengineering.

Ichiro Ogura. Photo by Brett Homenick. 

Another guest at the event was actor Ichiro Ogura. Born on October 29, 1951, Ogura-san began his acting career in 1964 as a child actor. His film credits include: Nikkatsu's The Black Sheep (1967) as Takeshi Egawa, Ultraman Tiga: The Final Odyssey (2000) as Dr. Yao Naban, and Kamen Rider Hibiki & the Seven Senki (2005) as Suzu's father.

On the small screen, Ogura-san appears in episode 14 of Captain Ultra (1967) as Susumu, and episode 22 of Submersion of Japan (1974-75) as Junichi Ishiguro, among other tokusatsu credits.


It was great to meet Ogura-san for the first time, and I hope to have a chance to do so again in the future.

Sunday, January 28, 2018

An Evening with Teruyoshi Nakano

 Teruyoshi Nakano. Photo by Brett Homenick.

Tonight was spent in the company of former Godzilla series SFX director Teruyoshi Nakano, whose career at Toho spanned several decades.


I don't think there are many movie biz folks in Japan I've been around more than Nakano-san, but it never gets dull. He's always got a story to tell!

Sunday, January 21, 2018

AN EVENING WITH A CINEMATIC LEGEND! Meeting Cinematographer Daisaku Kimura!

Daisaku Kimura. Photo by Brett Homenick.

Earlier this evening, I attended a special dinner event with cinematographer Daisaku Kimura. A good case could be made that he is the greatest cinematographer in Japanese film history. A quick look at some of his credits ought to be an indicator: Submersion of Japan (1973), Blue Christmas (1978), Virus (a.k.a. Resurrection Day, 1980), and Station (1981), among many others. 

In 1958, Kimura-san joined Toho Studios and worked as an assistant cameraman under Akira Kurosawa, during which his most prominent credit was Yojimbo (1961). In 1973, he became a cinemtographer in his own right. 


Blue Christmas and Station are two of the best-looking movies I've ever seen, and Kimura-san filmed both. Suffice it to say, it was a true honor to meet him. At the end of the event, I was saying my goodbyes when Kimura-san asked where I lived. When I mentioned my neighborhood, he told me it wasn't too far from his home, and so he invited me to ride in the car with him. (It sure beat taking the train back, that's for sure!) It was certainly a unique experience, and thankfully the driver didn't seem to mind the short detour to my neighborhood.

What a cool evening!

Sunday, October 11, 2015

SEARCHING FOR SUGAR VOICE! Former Toho Actress Yasuko Agawa Performs Jazz in Otemachi!

The stage is set! Women in Jazz is soon to start! Photo by Brett Homenick. 

In 2012, a documentary was released called Searching for Sugar Man, which was about a couple of South African music fans' quest to find the '70s folk musician known simply as Rodriguez. The documentary went on to win the Oscar for Best Documentary and is well worth checking out.

Japanese jazz singer Yasuko Agawa earned the nickname Sugar Voice over the years due to her voice's exceptional quality. She remains a popular chanteuse to this day. But what you may not realize is that Yasuko Agawa acted in several classic Toho movies during the 1970s under the stage name Tomoe Mari.

Yours truly with Yasuko Agawa, a former actress and a celebrated jazz singer. 

During her acting years, she appeared in several notable films, including Terror of Mechagodzilla (1975) as Yuri Yamamoto, Evil of Dracula (1974), The Last Days of Planet Earth (1974), and The Human Revolution (1973). On television, she appeared in the Submersion of Japan series (1974-75), Ultraman Leo (1974-75), and Zone Fighter (1973). In the late '70s, Agawa-san quit acting completely and pursued a successful career as a jazz singer.


Tonight I attended a concert called Women in Jazz, which was held in the Nikkei Building in Otemachi, Tokyo. Agawa-san was joined by several other jazz singers and musicians, who performed to a packed house. The singers all performed separately (except for the last song), and the ran ran for over two hours.

Several days prior to the show, I arranged with a staff member to meet Agawa-san after the concert. I was told to wait in the lobby, and I would have a chance to meet her. It turned out to be an after party for the musicians and crew, and naturally I didn't want to interrupt the proceedings. But, once I saw an opening, I introduced myself to Agawa-san, who extended her hand for me to shake. I rattled off some of her movie titles, which made her laugh. We spoke for a few moments and then posed for a couple of photos.

Agawa-san was very friendly, and if I have a chance to see her in concert again, I'd go in a heartbeat. It was great to meet another actress I've grew up watching. Thank you very much, Agawa-san!

Monday, June 8, 2015

DESTROY ALL MONSTERS LOCATIONS! Exploring Where Certain Scenes Were Shot in Tokyo!

The Nippon Budokan, which was seen among the ruins of Tokyo in Destroy All Monsters (1968). Photo by Brett Homenick.

Located in Chiyoda, Tokyo, the Nippon Budokan is a venue that has hosted many popular musical acts from around the world, but fans of Japanese monster movies will most likely recognize it as that unusually-shaped building seen in the Tokyo skyline after the Kilaak-controlled monsters ravage the city in Destroy All Monsters (1968).

The Nippon Budokan still attracts throngs of music lovers. Photo by Brett Homenick.

Those who have visited Super Festival have likely passed the Nippon Budokan on the way to the event, without even realizing that the building was seen in one of the most popular kaiju movies of all time. The Nippon Budokan is about a five-minute walk from Kudanshita Station.


Shimizu-mon Gate, part of Tokyo's Imperial Palace, also played a role in Destroy All Monsters. Photo by Brett Homenick. 

The scene in which the masses in Tokyo flee the rampaging kaiju, and actress Yukiko Kobayashi steps into the shot and flashes a sinister grin, was filmed near the Imperial Palace. Specifically, it was filmed at Shimizu-mon Gate.


Shimizu-mon Gate was the site of panicking Tokyoites in the film Submersion of Japan (1973). With this location, you get two for the price of one!

The Nippon Budokan, as seen (more or less) from Shimizu-mon Gate. Photo by Brett Homenick.

I'm working on photographing more locations from Destroy All Monsters and other films. As always, keep it here for further updates.

Sunday, April 19, 2015

TERUYOSHI NAKANO RETURNS! The SFX Director Talks Espy!

Former Toho SFX director Teruyoshi Nakano signs a shikishi board for a lucky fan. Photo by Brett Homenick.

I just returned from a movie event in Yokohama with famed special effects director Teruyoshi Nakano. It was a small and intimate gathering hosted by Cinema Novecento, and the theme of the event was the Toho action film Espy (1974).


A 35mm print of Espy was screened, and while it was very enjoyable, I have to say that the most interesting part of the screening happened right at the beginning. Instead of the Espy theme music playing during Toho's production logo, Isao Tomita's opening music from The Last Days of Planet Earth (1974) suddenly blared from the speakers! Suffice it to say, I was surprised and wondered if we were going to be treated to a secret screening of this "banned" film.

After the production logo, however, there was an abrupt cut, and Espy began. I mentioned this to the group after the screening, but no one -- not even Nakano-san himself, who watched the film with us -- noticed anything different. However, my friend Yasushi and I asked the projectionist to look at the actual film, and sure enough there was a splice after the Toho production logo. Not only that, but the projectionist noticed that there was a sudden change in the soundtrack by comparing the film before and after the splice. Moreover, everyone in our group noticed that some of the more "risque" scenes were trimmed from the film.

So what happened? Our group hypothesized that, during the film's initial run, perhaps there was damage to the film print during the production logo, and Toho decided to slap on the logo from The Last Days of Planet Earth, which had already finished its theatrical run, to replace it. As for the other trims, perhaps they were done by an overly cautious theater manager. In any case, the differences were fascinating to see!


Nakano-san was in great spirits, as usual. He told the story of how author Sakyo Komatsu wanted actress Kaoru Yumi to star in Submersion of Japan (1973) but was unsuccessful. Afterward, he got her cast in the spin-off TV series.

Overall, it was a great event, and another one will take place next week. I look forward to attending it.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Sakyo Komatsu, 1931-2011

The late Sakyo Komatsu (with his friend and associate Kenju Shimomura) pose with a copy of G-FAN #80, in which his interview with yours truly appears, in 2007. Photo courtesy of Kenju Shimomura.

The celebrated author Sakyo Komatsu died on July 26, 2011, of pneumonia, reports The Japan Times. He was 80 years old.

Often called the Arthur C. Clarke of Japan, Mr. Komatsu wrote the novels on which the movies Submersion of Japan (1973 and 2006), Espy, Virus (1980), and Sayonara Jupiter were based. Mr. Komatsu even had a large hand in the production of the film version of Sayonara Jupiter.

In honor of his passing, I'm posting the interview I conducted with Mr. Komatsu (by correspondence) in 2007. The translation was provided by Kenju Shimomura.

Brett Homenick: What got you interested in the science fiction genre?
Sakyo Komatsu: Japan has experienced two atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in World War II. I knew the word “atomic bomb” when I was only ten years old. There was a description about atomic bomb in the novel which I have read in my favorite newspaper for children. When I first read that, I thought it was nonsense and complete nonsense. But four years after, I was shocked to find that this atomic bomb was actually dropped on Japan and taken thousands of life. I think that was the first time I started to feel interest in the relation between imagination and reality.

After I grew up, I was inspired by literature. However, I have soon faced the problem. I found it difficult to express what I really feel by writing mainstream literature. And then I have read The Prize of Peril by Robert Sheckley. I was shocked. It really opened my eyes. I have realized that philosophical problems, emotions, and psychology cannot be separated from the modern society, and modern society also cannot be formed without science and technology.

When I think about the meaning of my existence, science fiction is something that enables me to express what myself and mankind is. And science fiction united my interest in science and human imagination without discrepancy.

By the way, I majored in Italian literature in university. I think Piradello, whom I have chosen as a theme for my thesis, and literature such as Divine Comedy by Dante have a strong essence of science fiction. I like this kind of literature which will give pleasure to the readers by telling tales with grand scale imagination.

BH: How did you get started as a novel writer?
SK: In 1903, the Wright brothers' first airplane, which looked like a monster paper craft, flew in the air. Two years later in 1905, Einstein presented his special theory of relativity. Forty years after, in 1945, B29 bomber plane flew to Japan and dropped an atomic bomb. The B29 bomber and the atomic bomb can trace their origins back to 1903 and 1905. The creative power of mankind is considerable. But just like this example, it can create something unpredictable when they are combined. The creative power made by mankind also affects mankind. Taking all these aspects into consideration, I wanted to think about what mankind is. And writing a story about mankind was the best way to understand mankind.

BH: What did you think of the 1973 movie version of your novel Nippon Chinbotsu (a.k.a. Submersion of Japan)?
SK: I started to write Nippon Chinbotsu in 1964, and it took 9 years to complete.
Let me discuss why I wrote that novel. Until 15th of August 1945, when the Showa Emperor officially declared the end of the war to the Japanese nation, all the Japanese, especially a teenager like me, believed in governmental slogans such as “honorable death for all hundred million Japanese nations” or “decisive battle is when Americans landed on mainland Japan.” We all made up our mind for the coming death. However, once the war was over, Japanese overcame the consequence of defeat so easily, and by the 1960s, people were happy about the rapid economical growth of the country. When I saw those circumstances, I wanted to reconsider the meaning of what “Japan” is and what “Japanese” are. That is why I wrote Nippon Chinbotsu.

I was quite surprised when Toho had completed the film just after the book was published. The movie was quite faithful to the original story, and I was quite satisfied. I know that the movie was heavily re-edited and made into a disaster movie and released in U.S. with the title of Tidal Wave. However, the original story depicts the natural and calamity environments of Japan and the Japanese way of thinking which is based on such environment.

BH: Similarly, what did you think of Kinji Fukasaku's adaption of Fukkatsu no hi (a.k.a. Virus, 1980)?
SK: This is one of my favorite movies. The staff went all the way to Antarctica to shoot the film, used a real submarine, and famous overseas actors and actresses participated in the film. The contrast between human drama and vast natural view was well depicted. I also liked the visual beauty of the film.

BH: How did you get the job to co-direct the movie version of your novel Sayonara Jupiter?
SK: I would like you to read the article in this issue for the details. (Kenju Shimomura offers a complete account of the making of Sayonara Jupiter in G-FAN #80.) When I was asked by Tomoyuki Tanaka, the producer of Godzilla and Nippon Chinbotsu (1973 version), to make a story like Star Wars for his movie, I had a feeling that I did not want to do a rip-off. I felt, if I could make a movie set in space, I wanted to make something which can make the audience feel the theme of “Universe and mankind” visually. I have assembled various Japanese science fiction writers to create the film. Eventually I decided to be an executive producer of the film. I thought I have a responsibility to all the science fiction writers who gave me ideas and advice.

BH: What needed to be changed from the novel when making the film?
SK: Due to the limited time and budget, the scenes which were set on the moon were all cut out. Also scenes on Earth were cut out except for the Jupiter Beach sequence. As for the story, the past of Eiji and Maria, political struggles, were all cut out.

BH: How did you and your co-director Koji Hashimoto share directing duties?
SK: I tried not to say my opinion in the actual shooting of the film. I only said my opinion when director Koji Hashimoto needed my opinion to make his decision.

BH: What did you find easy and difficult about directing Sayonara Jupiter?
SK: Sayonara Jupiter was the first featured Japanese film to use computer graphics. In those days, it took 1 million yen to create 1 second computer graphic image. It was hard but also fun to think out how we can reduce the price for computer graphics without losing its quality. Also, it was the first attempt to bring the video camera into the shooting studio. Video cameras were still rare at that time. It was very useful to check the position of props, etc., from cut to cut.

BH: Do you have any interesting memories from the set of Sayonara Jupiter that you would like to share?
SK: I was present when the soundtrack music was recorded. It was interesting to listen to what the composer was saying to the orchestra. I was impressed that this talented composer also had a talent in expressing himself by words.

I wrote a lyric for the song used in the film and asked musician to compose a melody for it. I did this work together with musician staying overnight in the lodge. I was very happy when our approach toward the music was suddenly united and completed the music in that very night.

BH: What did you think of the completed film?
SK: As for the special effects, it expressed the vast scale and beauty of universe very well. I think the style of special effects we have achieved in Sayonara Jupiter was innovative for the Japanese film at that time. As for the live action scenes, I think we dealt very well with non-Japanese casts as well, and designs of interior sets were also wonderful. For me, the best achievement was the process of making film. I got lots of ideas and suggestions from various people, and I also shared a hardship with these people. As for the completed film, it is true that I had to compromise a lot. But all the people who participated in this movie did their best and their effort is reflected in the completed film. Most of all, the theme of the movie, which is “Courage and sadness of mankind which has to go ahead into the universe,” was visually depicted well.

BH: Do you have any closing remarks for readers of G-FAN magazine?
SK: I understand that one of the motivations of this magazine is Godzilla. I recognize that Japanese special effects (tokusatsu) films were influenced by classic American films like King Kong and Lost World. As for our future, let's exchange ideas and opinions actively in order to make a high quality science fiction movies.

(Translation by Kenju Shimomura. Special thanks to Peggy Rae Sapienza, Atsushi Morioka, Tamie Inoue, and Hiroaki Inoue of Nippon Worldcon.)

Sunday, September 19, 2010

RIP Keiju Kobayashi

Actor Keiju Kobayashi in a recent photo.

The Japan Times is reporting that actor Keiju Kobayashi died September 16, 2010, of heart failure. He was 86.

Mr. Kobayashi is best known to G-fans as playing Japan's prime minister in Godzilla 1985 (1984) and Dr. Tadokoro in Submersion of Japan (1973). He was born on November 23, 1923, and enjoyed a long and successful acting career that started in 1942 (appearing in more than 250 films in total) and continued to work until his death.

The Japan Times adds:
A Gunma Prefecture native, Kobayashi made his movie debut in 1942 and gained
popularity in the 1950s starring in a series of comedies featuring salaried
workers with ordinary man-next-door personalities.

Appearing in about 260 movies and TV dramas in roles ranging from prime ministers to police detectives, Kobayashi received medals of honor from the government for his longtime achievements and cultural contributions.
Thanks to Fabien Mauro for the tip.