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History is never objective. And when we think of history
we generally assume that it moves from a specific starting point, be it
the life of Jesus Christ, or the Meiji Restoration forward as opposed
to the other way around, from the contemporary moment backwards. The
fact
is, and historians would most likely disagree on this point, historical
discourse is not intended to explain the past, but rather justifies our
current condition. We use history not to explain previous eras, or
events,
but rather to discover something about ourselves. Nor should history be
circumscribed to a specific discipline. To view historical discourse
within
the extremely narrow confines of the specific discipline is to ignore
the presence of historical knowledge embodied in architecture (e.g.,
Gallery
éf, an earlier exhibiting venue), visual media including even
narrative
cinema.
On November 3, 1954 the first Gojira (Godzilla) film was
released in Japan. Just a few months prior during an American hydrogen
test blast in the Bikini Atoll, on March 1, 1954, the Daigo Fukuryu
Maru was showered with radioactive fallout. All the crewmen became ill,
and eventually on September 23, 1954, Aikichi Kuboyama the radio
operator of the vessel would succumb to the effects of radiation
illness. It is no accident that the first Gojira film premiers
on the heels of this event; nor is it an accident that the opening
scene of this film takes place on a fishing boat resembling the Daigo
Fukuryu Maru. And moreover, the very first person to ‘die’ in the film
is the radio operator of the vessel. This film, while not conforming to
the standard rules of evidence as maintained in the historical
discipline, nevertheless conveys knowledge of past events. And although
it might not be ‘accurate,’ it might convey some of the emotions of
that event, the fear and horror of atomic weaponry.
A couple years after the release of the Japanese film, an American film
company purchased the rights to Gojira and completely re-edited
the film and inserted an American actor into the narrative. In
addition, and most revealing, all the explicit references to American
use of atomic weaponry were edited out of the film. The ending for
example of the 1954 version, while heavy handed in its moralism, was
cut from the film because of its demand that nuclear testing stop. In
another scene from the 1954 version characters make reference to
surviving Nagasaki, wartime evacuations, and radiated tuna this too has
been cut out from the American version. If we consider Gojira
to embody some sort of historical narrative either version is used to
justify certain ideological positions.
My video installation, About Fallout, juxtaposes these two narratives,
comparing the opening scenes of the Japanese and American version of Gojira.
The video opens with a preface, showing the American and Japanese
opening scenes side-by-side. What follows is a chronology, beginning
with a count-down of American nuclear tests, leading to the spectacular
Bravo test which produced a fire ball that spanned four miles; the
flash of light from the test was seen as far away as Okinawa. The video
references critical dates from the Daigo Fukuryu Maru incident to the
Japanese and American releases of Gojira. At times what is seen
is the video-feed from both versions of the film superimposed over one
another; the result is a distorted image, as if either image is
attempting to impose itself on the other. The other footage in the film
is taken from a variety of American films such as About Fallout
(which I have appropriated as my own title) sponsored by the US Defense
Department and A is for Atom a film presented by General Electric. On
the audio track I have included
dialogue from the 1954 version of Gojira that was cut out from
the
American version.
It is easy in this case to illustrate how American filmmakers have
become revisionist historians of sorts. Such conclusions, however, are
too easy. Besides what narrative filmmaker doesn’t take liberties, the
problem is not so much that the ‘truth’ of the original film has been
violated, or even that the spirit of the Japanese film has been
excised, but rather what I hope this video demonstrates is that
historical knowledge is fragile. It changes form and pledges no
allegiance to the past, but is answerable
only to those who construct history.
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