Films

Alone Together
American Sons
Black Tar Heroin
Days of Waiting
The Conscience of Nhem En
The Fair
Hunting Tigers
Life Was Good
The Lisa Theory
Living on Tokyo Time
The Mushroom Club
Rehab
Survivors
Troubled Paradise
Unfinished Business
White Light/Black Rain

The Mushroom Club
 
2005 / Documentary / 34 minutes
“Filmmaker Okazaki returns to the city where the first atomic bomb was dropped to survey a society where memories of the devastating event are fading. Amidst the solemn official commemorations and the people who'd just as soon ignore the bomb and its aftermath, he finds a dwindling community of survivors and others who seek to keep the story alive and vivid.”
— Los Angeles Times

 

 

 

 

The Mushroom Club is a filmmaker’s journey to Hiroshima, sixty years after the bomb. Academy Award-winning filmmaker Steven Okazaki, who first visited the city in 1980, takes a very personal look at Hiroshima – the place, the people, the historical event, the idea. It is a compelling collection of everyday images – a class photo, a spool of thread, a handful of buttons – and the powerful stories that come with them.

The film features several hibakusha or atomic bomb survivors. The oldest was a 25 year old newlywed and the youngest weren’t born yet when the atomic bomb was dropped on August 6, 1945. On that day, all of their lives were unalterably changed, beyond what most of us can imagine.

Keiji Nakazawa, six years old then, lost his father, brother and sister in the bombing. He survived by sheer luck, bending down to pick up a rock. He dedicated his life to telling his family’s story in comic book form in the 2,000 page manga series “Barefoot Gen.”

Yoshiko Kajiyama, four years old then, clutches a spool of red thread, the only thing she has to remember her mother by. Orphaned by the bomb, Kajiyama and her three year old brother went into the hills above the city and ate the leaves off of trees to survive.

Yuriko Hatanaka was three months in utero when her mother witnessed the bomb. She is now 59 years old but has the mental capacity of a two year old. She was diagnosed as microcephalic, also known as small-head syndrome, but it took thirty years for Japanese and American scientists to admit to her parents that her mental and physical disabilities are caused by radiation exposure. Yuriko and her father are members of the Kinoko Kai or the Mushroom Club, a support group of so-called “small-headed children” and their parents.

“Hiroshima is full of remarkable people and stories,” says Okazaki who has visited Hiroshima numerous times over the past twenty-five years. He decided to make his film in 1995 when the fiftieth anniversary of the bombing came and went with minimal media coverage. “In Hiroshima, there was a lot of anticipation around the fiftieth anniversary. People thought that the Hiroshima story would finally be heard around the world. Then it came and nothing happened. The American news shows mumbled something about ‘today is the fiftieth anniversary’ and that was it. The people in Hiroshima, the peace movement in Japan, went kind of numb after that and still hasn’t recovered,” said Okazaki. “The Enola Gay, the airplane that dropped the bomb is on exhibit in the new Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum and there is no mention of radiation or of the people dying, because it is still too controversial to admit to the extraordinary human suffering caused by one bomb. It’s a lesson in how history gets written.”