Director: | Yūji Murakami and others |
Starring: |
|
Theme Music Composer: | Hikaru Hayashi |
Composer: | Hikaru Hayashi |
Country: | Japan |
Language: | Japanese |
Num Episodes: | 51 |
Producer: | Susumu Kondō (chief) |
Runtime: | 45 minutes |
Network: | NHK |
Sanga Moyu (山河燃ゆ) is a Japanese television drama based on the 1983 novel Futatsu no Sokoku (二つの祖国) by Toyoko Yamazaki. It was NHK's taiga drama in 1984.
The Amo family lives in Los Angeles, California. Two of the sons, Kenji and Tadashi, live in Japan. Kenji returns to the United States before war broke out in 1941, and is sent to Manzanar with his family as part of the World War II incarceration of Japanese Americans. Kenji joins the United States Army and is sent to fight in the Philippines, where he shoots Tadashi, who joined the Imperial Japanese Army. Isamu, the third son, joins the 442nd. After the war Kenji finds Nagiko, a childhood friend who had confessed her love for him just before he returned to the United States. She was a victim of the bombing of Hiroshima. Kenji then becomes an interpreter at the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, where he commits suicide in the courtroom because of the internal turmoil caused by his split loyalties.[1]
Several Japanese American organizations like the Japanese American Citizens League were concerned that the portrayal of split loyalties would affect the movement for redress.[2] Some individual Japanese Americans, including Mike Masaoka, also wrote to the NHK to express their concerns about airing the show in the United States.[3] It was not broadcast in the United States until 1989. The show's name was also changed from "Futatsu no Sokoku" (Two Homelands) to "Sanga Moyu" (The Mountains and Rivers are Burning) for this reason.[4]
The series was considered unusual in Japan because NHK's Taiga dramas usually concern history before the Meiji era. Many Japanese films at the time showed Japan as being the victims of World War II, but the NHK chose to include Japanese atrocities.
According to the Japan Times, the original novel was based on the life of Akira Itami.[5]
Episode | Original airdate | Title | Directed by | Rating | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Yūji Murakami | 30.5% | |||
2 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
3 | Mikio Satō | ||||
4 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
5 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
6 | Mikio Satō | ||||
7 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
8 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
9 | Mikio Satō | ||||
10 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
11 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
12 | Mikio Satō | ||||
13 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
14 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
15 | Mikio Satō | ||||
16 | Kōji Matsuoka | ||||
17 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
18 | Mikio Satō | ||||
19 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
20 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
21 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
22 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
23 | Mikio Satō | ||||
24 | Kōji Matsuoka | ||||
25 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
26 | Mikio Satō | ||||
27 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
28 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
29 | Mikio Satō | ||||
30 | Teru Tajima | ||||
31 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
32 | Mikio Satō | ||||
33 | Kōji Matsuoka | ||||
34 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
35 | Mikio Satō | ||||
36 | Teru Tajima | ||||
37 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
38 | Mikio Satō | ||||
39 | Teru Tajima | ||||
40 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
41 | Morihisa Matsudaira | ||||
42 | Mikio Satō | ||||
43 | Takeshi Kobayashi | ||||
44 | Kōji Matsuoka | ||||
45 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
46 | Mikio Satō | ||||
47 | Teru Tajima | ||||
48 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
49 | Mikio Satō | ||||
50 | Shizuhiro Izuta | ||||
51 | Yūji Murakami | ||||
Average rating 21.1% - Rating is based on Japanese Video Research (Kantō region). |