Als die Sonne vom Himmel fiel


Als die Sonne vom Himmel fiel is a 2015 Swiss documentary film. Focussing on the atomic bombing of Hiroshima by the United States Army Air Force on 6 August 1945, it was filmed and produced at locations in the Hiroshima and in the Fukushima prefectures, Japan, and produced by the Japanese-Swiss filmmaker Aya Domenig.

Plot (excerpt)

The filmmaker Aya Domenig is of Japanese-Swiss origin and intended to trace the life of her grandfather – after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima by the United States Army Air Force on 6 August 1945 – Shigeru Doi worked as a doctor in a Red Cross hospital in Hiroshima, and the filmmaker tries to find closer to him. Aya Domenig meets Chizuko Uchida, a former nurse, her grandmother and Shuntaro Hida, a doctor, the second Hibakusha who is portrayed in the documentary film – they have a similar fate as the filmmaker's grandfather who throughout his life never spoke about what he had experienced. While researching her film in Hiroshima, on 11 March 2011 the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster occurs, and the filmmaker's intention takes a turn.
Uchida is still involved in a citizens' initiative related to the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe, and she gave to a mother and her son who were refugees from Fukushima a new home. The other contemporary witness, Shuntaro Hida, still reads on his experiences in Hiroshima, but he no longer participates in the annual commemoration at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, because he calls it "hypocrisy", and claims that the long-term consequences of nuclear radiation would be played down by the authorities and the suffering of the victims is still tabooized.

Cast

The German language title Als die Sonne vom Himmel fiel literally means When the sun fell from the heaven, and is referring to the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. For the worldwide distribution, the title The Day The Sun Fell is used.

Background

On 6 August 1945, some 70,000–80,000 people, or around 30% of the population of Hiroshima, were killed by the blast and resultant firestorm, and another 70,000 injured. According to the Hiroshima A-bomb Medical Care History, at the time of the atomic bombing there were 298 doctors of medicine in Hiroshima, but 60 of them were killed immediately, and 210 wounded. The thousands of wounded and dying people were then doctored by a very small group of medical personnel, among them Aya Domenig's grandfather, Shigeru Doi, who was a doctor of internal medicine at the Red Cross hospital, and Doctor Shuntaro Hida, as well as Chizuko Uchida and a number of other hospital nurses who cared for the victims after the atomic bombing.

Production

Aya Domenig had been interested in the story of her family since she was a teenager: I always wanted to know more about the background of my grandfather. At film school she thought about making a graduation film on her grandfather's fate, but there was just time to produce short movies. When she visited her about 80 years old grandmother in Japan, she realised to hurry up to make the movie, and actually, she passed away one month after we finished the film.
In 2010 the director spent one month at her family in Japan, and she read an article about the Junod no Kai – Domenig planned to hear first-hand accounts from Chizuko Uchida who was a member of the society that provided Red Cross hospitals after the bombing of Hiroshima. Domenig learned through Uchida that the period was not an easy topic to talk about: "I boiled water in a pot on the stove to disinfect surgical tools", told Mrs Ichida to school children when Domenig was filming, and "we burned many bodies". After assisting as nurse, Uchida returned to her parents' home, suffering from anemia, high fever and other aftereffects of the bombing. Nevertheless, she continued to work as a nurse until her retirement. "I was impressed by how she thinks on her own and moved on with her life after she experienced the bombing", Domenig said on occasion of an interview by the Japanese newspaper The Asahi Shimbun in October 2012.
Aya Domenig also used archival footage showing the victims of Hiroshima and demonstrating the destructive power of the bomb on the human body. The black and white material was shot in September 1945 and submitted by a journalist from Tokyo who had come without any official support with a group of scientists to record what had happened – the United States authorities noted this immediately and confiscated all the material. Only in 1968 some sequences for the first time were published. The color images were taken in April 1946 by the US Army to document the effects of the bombs, but first published in the 1980s.
Aya Domenig's first feature film was supported with CHF 365,000: CHF 145,000 by Filmstiftung of the Canton of Zürich and CHF 220,000 by the federal authorities. Als die Sonne vom Himmel fiel was produced by ican films gmbh and Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen and Finnish Broadcasting Company. The documentary was filmed at locations in Hiroshima and Fukushima in Japan.
Aya Domenig tells in German the fate of her grandfather, the interviews with the protagonists in Japan are in Japanese, and their statements are subtitled in German, French and English.

Release

The Swiss documentary film premiered at the Festival del film Locarno on 9 August 2015, and in Japan on occasion of the Hiroshima International Film Festival on 23 November 2015. Distributed by the Zürich-based Look Now!, the documentary started on 7 January 2016 in Zurich, Basel, Bern and Luzern in three Swiss cinemas and has been played since then in various Swiss cinémas. On Swiss television it was shown for the first time on 7 September 2017.

Home media

The film was released with the title Als die Sonne vom Himmel fiel in the DVD format on 15 November 2016. The home release includes language versions in Swiss German and Japanese, and subtitles in English, French, Italian, Japanese, Spanish and German.

Festivals

The Swiss newspaper Der Landbote claims: Aya Domenig succeeded the balancing act between personal retelling of the family history and the historical analysis. It is a universal lesson on a piece of the history that has lost none of its relevance today.
cineuropa.org claims: This is a sincere film, a reflection of a wounded country that, nevertheless, is looking to heal itself, slowly but tirelessly.
Semaine de la critique, a cooperation of the Swiss Association of Film Journalists and the Locarno International Film Festival claims: Domenig observes the old woman’s quiet determination. With her thirst for action she represents, as it were, the crisis-stricken island nation that time and again evades facing its traumas. In order to endure the future, light has to be shed on the shadows of the past. Aya Domenig’s highly sensitive film is a contribution to this endeavour.