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Fumio Kamei

Fumio Kamei

Fumio Kamei (1908–1987) was a Japanese documentary and fiction film director known for his politically charged works. Influenced by Soviet montage theory, he began his career at Photo Chemical Laboratories (PCL), making propaganda films about Japan’s war in China. His 1939 film Fighting Soldiers was banned for its unflinching portrayal of exhausted troops, and he later became the first director to lose his license under the 1939 Film Law and the only filmmaker arrested under the Peace Preservation Law. After World War II, Kamei helped reorganize Nippon Eiga-sha and directed The Japanese Tragedy (1946), a documentary critical of Japan’s imperialist past, which was ultimately censored. He continued making politically engaged documentaries and fiction films, tackling issues such as U.S. military bases in Japan, nuclear weapons, social discrimination, and environmental destruction.

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Known For

  • War and Peace
  • Fighting Soldiers
  • Men Are All Brothers
  • The People of Sunagawa
  • Wheat Will Never Fall
  • The World Is Terrified: The Reality of the “Ash of Death”
  • Shanghai
  • Tragedy of Japan
  • A Lonely Woman in a Lonely Land
  • Peking
  • All Living Things Are Friends—Lullabies of Birds, Insects and Fish
  • Shape without Shape
  • Living in a Rough Sea
  • All Must Live: People, Insects and Birds
  • Children of the Base
  • It Is Good to Live
  • Record of Bloodshed: Sunagawa
  • A Woman's Life
  • Kobayashi Issa
  • Become a Mother, Become a Woman