06.12.06

“Tokyo Raw”

Posted in Uncategorized at 10:21 pm by anthonytobin

I finished the first film with my Tokyo footage taken June 1-5. It combines the areas of old San’ya, the east side of Tokyo including Minami Senju, Ueno, Nippori, Minowa, and Asukasa. It also has Shinjuku, Shibuya, and Harajuku from the more modern, western side of Tokyo. I have tried to contrast the old and the new, with film and some still images.

This is an experiment as I move toward completing a personal narrative film about my impressions during the trip, and some historical and current information on the city. I am interested to know what works and what does not.

06.10.06

Tokyo films are in progress

Posted in Uncategorized at 7:54 pm by anthonytobin

I have uploaded all of my video from the Tokyo trip. There is a great deal of material to work with and it will take awhile to create the films I have in mind. In the meantime, I have raw Quicktime, or Windows Media footage of the Hibiya Subway Line coming into Minami Senju Station, with the Koenki Shrine, cemetery, and Buddha visible below. This is the Buddha that thousands of condemned criminals saw before they were beheaded during the Edo period in the area known as “Kozukappara.”

06.04.06

Tokyo, Japan, and culture

Posted in Uncategorized at 9:58 pm by anthonytobin

I am at a kiosk at Narita airport, with 5 hours to go, I hope, before the flight leaves.  Tokyo has been the amazing smorgasbord of sensory images I expected it to be.  I can’t wait to go through the 5 hours of video footage and almost 2 gigs of fotos I took….
shinjuku

The culture is so traditional, with so many rules that an American can only imagine.  East and West, new and old clash in ways I have not seen in other parts of the world.  I hope to explore this in the next film.

I stayed on the East side of Tokyo, an area shunned by the Japanese.  My Japanese friends tried to convince me to stay in another part of town.  But the 2200 yen/night ( about 20 dollars) price made it possible to explore the city and get some interesting cd’s, and, most important, glean insight into an older, less affluent Japan.  I loved walking around at 6-8 AM as people went to work, seeing the energy, taking photos and video, and finding a part of Japan that most American’s do not see.
buddha

This is just south and to the right of Minami Senju Station, an area known as “Kozukappara” that in the Edo period (1660-1868) was used for 200,000 executions of prisoners. This Buddha was placed in 1721 to give the final ministrations to the condemned, who did not see a priest before they were beheaded. The Buddha and the cemetery watch over the souls of the many dead.

The area was considered unclean since it was also used to slaughter and cure animal meat and hides for the upper class. Also the northeast, this portion of Tokyo, was considered in the Edo period to bring in the evils and bad omens of the city. After the firebombs of WWII the government sent the poor and destitute to the area and it maintained a stigma. It also has crematoriums, a huge gas plant, sewage treatment, and tanneries. Flophouses for day laborers developed in the 50-’s-60’s and now are being transformed into backpack hostels. They are advertised on the internet as cheap hotels.

Which is why I stayed there in the first place.
msstore Pachinko! parlor outside Nippori Station Man in San'ya