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  1. #1

    Default Iris Chang: Rape of Nanking (documentary film)


    Synopsis:

    IRIS CHANG: The Rape of Nanking is a feature-length documentary film about a young woman’s journey to bring one of the darkest chapters of history to light.

    In July 1937 the Japanese Imperial Army, which already controlled a large section of northeastern China, launched an undeclared war against the Republic of China. Five months later, on December 13, its troops entered the capital city of Nanking and began raping and murdering its citizens in an orgy of violence that has few parallels in modern history.

    Tens of thousands of Chinese prisoners-of-war were machine gunned en masse. An estimated 20,000 women were raped. Countless defenseless civilians; men, women and children were killed on the streets or in their homes. A British reporter who was on the scene compared the Japanese troops to Attila and the Huns. Writer George Will described the mass slaughter, which became known as “The Rape of Nanking” as “perhaps the most appalling single episode of barbarism in a century replete with horror.”

    The Rape of Nanking was front page news when it happened but it was soon forgotten in the west, swept into the dustbin of history until 1994 when a young Chinese-American writer named Iris Chang saw photographs of the atrocities at a conference in Cupertino, California. Chang had an epiphany when she realized that those photographs captured the last second of a real person’s life and they were no longer anonymous corpses in a photograph. Chang, whose own grandparents had barely escaped the massacre, decided it was her responsibility to rescue this event from oblivion.

    IRIS CHANG: The Rape of Nanking tells the story of Nanking through the eyes of Iris Chang. It begins at the conference in Cupertino, and retraces her journey as she researched and wrote her book.

    Chang was deeply affected by her interviews with survivors of the massacre, and the film recreates her intense emotional experience by intertwining dramatic reenactments, with actress Olivia Cheng as Iris Chang, with the heartrending recollections of men and women who saw their families murdered in front of their eyes. Her character, which drives the film’s narrative, is revealed through excerpts from her speeches and television appearances, along with interviews with friends, family and colleagues. As well as telling Chang’s personal story, the film uses chilling archival footage to supply the historical perspective necessary to understand what happened in Nanking.

    The film, in addition to her research and writing of her book, follows the last seven years in Chang’s life in the wake of the publication of her book in1997, an unexpected best-seller which was highly-praised in the west, but which ignited a firestorm of controversy in Japan where many prominent people continue to this day to deny that the Japanese army committed war crimes during WWII. It goes on to recount how Chang, despite being vilified by the revisionists, continued to speak out on behalf of the victims of Japan’s wartime aggression until her untimely death due to suicide in November, 2004.

    ---------------------------------------

    From the diaries of japanese soldiers
    "We had fun killing Chinese. We caught some innocent Chinese and either buried them alive, or pushed them into a fire, or beat them to death with clubs. When they were half dead we pushed them into ditches and burned them, torturing them to death. Everyone gets his entertainment this way. Its like killing dogs and cats." --Asahi Shimbun, Japanese soldier, describing Japanese atrocities during the Rape of Nanking.

    "We took turns raping them. We always stabbed and killed them. When we were raping her, we looked at her as a woman. But when we killed her, we just thought of her as something like a pig." --Azuma Shiro, Japanese soldier.

    ------------------------
    My favorite quotes from the film

    "History teaches us lesson"

    "Somebody had to listen, to record and validate their experiences by making it public.
    I couldn't turn away just like I couldn't turn away before." - Iris Chang

    "and I also think it's important to remember these stories and to remind us that no matter how civilized we are it doesn't take much for us to get to the point where we can massacre each other without second thought and in the end I'm left with one question,
    When will the madness end?" - Iris Chang

    Trailer:
    Iris Chang - The Rape of Nanking - Trailer

    A song for Iris- OST (Iris Chang: Rape of Nanking)
    YouTube - A song for Iris - Iris Chang theme song??

    ----------
    Iris Chang was the eye opener for us who forgotten the horrible atrocities of the Japanese soldiers.
    Not just Chinese and Koreans who were the victims of the holocaust of World War II but also
    Filipinos, let's not forget the Bataan Death March and the tragic death of women, children and men just like Nanking. This is a disturbing film where shows how the japanese soldiers at that time treated other races as pigs or animal.
    Last edited by umehime00; 08-22-2010 at 08:33 PM.

  2. #2
    ^^Interesting. I'll check this one out.

    I suggest you to also watch Manila 1945-The Forgotten Atrocities.

  3. #3
    nice.. i will also check this one..

  4. #4
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    there's a full length movie of this.. its titled NANKING... sorry i can't post the link... but its available online if you know how to search it.. lol

  5. #5
    kanice ani oiez nga movie i hope makakita ko ani hehehe XD

  6. #6
    nice movie. download ko ani

  7. #7
    nindot ni. some historians thought that ww2 started when germany invaded poland in sept 1939, but ww2 actually started when japan invaded china in 1937.

  8. #8
    @kenites, thanks... try pud ko tan-aw ani...

    i'm downloading iris chang's rape of nanking: holocaust of world war II book
    and the diary minnie vautrin right now.

    dugay naman ko kabasa sa book ni iris chang pag college wayback 2007 pa. karon lang jud nabalik akong interest sa topic after finding out that the author committed suicide.
    ------------------------------------
    It was said that Chang suffered a nervous breakdown in August 2004, which her family, friends and doctors attributed in part to constant sleep deprivation. At the time, she was several months into research for her fourth book, about the Bataan Death March.

    source: from wiki... Iris Chang - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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