Rabbit in the Moon
Rank
Bottom 20% of all time (see others with this rank)
Festival Year
1999 (click here to see all competition films from this year)
Category
Documentary Competition
Non-Cast Credits
Emiko Omori, Chizuko Omori, Pat Jackson, Witt Monts, Pat Jackson, Janice Giteck
Description
Most narratives about the World War II intern- ment of Japanese Americans focus on the internees' silence and patriotism, as proven by their service in segregated military Units like the 442nd Battalion. Emiko Omori offers an extraordinary alternative perspective, which portrays second-generation Japanese American, or Nisei, camp survivors not as passive victims or model citizens but angry, active, critical individuals.
The inspiration for the film is the directors struggle against the silence in her own family concerning the internment, in particular their amnesia about her mother, who died soon after her release from camp in Poston, Arizona. In the process of recovering her memory, Omori interviews former internees, including her sister, who describe how the camps whittled away the community's cultural strength and self-esteem and the federal government maneuvered the rise of the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL), a leadership organization which championed unquestioning compliance with the evacuation and encouraged military service to prove loyalty.
Rabbit in tire Moon aggressively overturss the JACL image of Japanese Americans during the war and brings an end to a generation of silence. Dissenting voices by interned Nisel are brilliantly used to renari ate newsreel propaganda films about tire camps. Draft resisters from the Heart Mountain camp speak angrily about having to prove an American citizenship that was supposed to be their birthright. Impressively archived and beautifully photographed, Rabbit in the Moon is a historically important documentary with a poetic voice that reflects a culturally ingrained restraint.
Reviewer
Shari Frilot (see other films reviewed by the same reviewer)