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Fukushima nuclear disaster and water release
Asia

VideoJapanese director breaks industry taboo with crowd-funded nuclear drama

Getting no support from studios for "The House of Rising Sun", Takafumi turns to the public for help in getting his story told

Filmmaker Takafumi Ota. Photo: SCMP Pictures

Japanese film director Takafumi Ota had a problem. He needed studio financing for a film that was harshly critical of the nuclear industry in the aftermath of Fukushima, but no one was interested in funding his project the traditional way.

Large sections of Japan’s movie industry wanted nothing to do with it, and he was told that influential sponsors did not want to be associated with anything that criticised the powerful atomic sector.

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“It wasn’t only major film distribution companies but also DVD companies – who usually get interested in investing in films to share copyright – who showed no interest in my plan,” said the 52-year-old Ota, whose previous work includes the critically acclaimed 2006 film Strawberry fields, which screened at the Cannes International Film Festival.

“A senior film director told me, ‘Don’t do this. You’ll never be able to make commercial films.’”

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With few options to make the film, but a groundswell of anti-nuclear feeling in post-Fukushima Japan, Ota turned to the public to make his film in another example of how crowd-funding is changing the face of traditional financing.

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