Japan: Memoirs Of a Secret Empire (2004) USA
Japan: Memoirs Of a Secret Empire Image Cover
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Director:Goldfarb, Lyn, Desnoo, Deborah Ann
Studio:Lyn Goldfarb Productions
Rating:7.4 (67 votes)
Date Added:2012-06-05
ASIN:097368778740
Genre:English films
IMDb:0800290
Duration:2:40:00
Languages:English
Subtitles:No Subtitles
LAC code:300001197
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Goldfarb, Lyn, Desnoo, Deborah Ann  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
Michael Auslin  ...  Himself - Nikko Toshogu Shrine
Beatrice M. Bodart-Bailey  ...  Herself - Otsuma Women's University
Richard Chamberlain  ...  Narrator
Michael Cooper  ...  Himself - Former editor, 'Monumenta Nipponica'
Ryonosuke Etoh  ...  (3 episodes, 2004)
Mariko Fujiwara  ...  (3 episodes, 2004)
Daisuke Igakura  ...  (3 episodes, 2004)
James Kent  ...  (3 episodes, 2004)
Isao Machii  ...  (3 episodes, 2004)
Alexei Podtheko  ...  (3 episodes, 2004)
Luke S. Roberts  ...  Himself - UC Santa Barbara
Toshihiro Satô  ...  (3 episodes, 2004)
Shin Ya-nae  ...  (3 episodes, 2004)
Eiko Ikegami  ...  Herself - Otsuma Women's University
Cecilia Segawa Seigle  ...  Herself - University of Pennsylvania
Harutoshi Takafuji  ...  Himself - Nikko Toshogu Shrine
Hirofumi Yamamoto  ...  Himself - University of Tokyo
Comments: DEN 136

Summary: The mysteries of feudal Japan are thoroughly explored in Japan: Memoirs of a Secret Empire, originally presented on PBS as part of its excellent nonfiction series Empires. The history covered in this 160-minute, two-part program is concise yet comprehensive: The period of 16th- to 19th-century Japan was an eventful renaissance dominated by the rise of the Tokugawa Shogunate, a 250-year dynasty that began (in Part 1: "The Way of the Samurai") under the leadership of Tokugawa Ieyasu (b. 1543), saw the arrival of Portuguese merchants and European Christian missionaries, and endured despite uneasy alliances and eventual war between opposing daimyo warlords. Part 2 ("The Will of the Shogun") finds Ieyasu successfully establishing a lasting piece based on samurai codes of ethics and obedience; the harsher rule of his grandson Iemitsu results in the expulsion of foreigners, leading to the Shimabara rebellion of 1637 and the start of Japan's 200-year prohibition of foreign visitors. Part 3 ("The Return of the Barbarians") chronicles the thriving metropolis of Edo (which would eventually become Tokyo) and 18th-century re-opening of Japan's borders, including the 1853 arrival of American Commodore Matthew C. Perry and his demands that Japan open trade relations with the United States or face possible warfare. As the Tokugawa Shogunate ended, the era of modern Japan began, and all of these events are recounted in rich detail by narrator (and Shogun TV star) Richard Chamberlain, visualized through elaborate re-creations and Edo-period artworks. All in all, this is a highly recommended primer for a deeper, book-related study of Japanese history, with a detailed website link for those seeking greater detail on the events and personalities showcased on this fine DVD. --Jeff Shannon