Fukushima 50 (2020) [Film Review]

Fukushima 50; or, When Disaster Strikes
     We believed we controlled nature. It was human ego.
Exactly 9 years after the disastrous Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, Fukushima 50 is the first live-action motion picture which retells the tragic events that ensued in Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. Directed by Setsuro Wakamatsu, and inspired by the non-fiction novel On the Brink: The Inside Story of Fukushima Daiichi by Ryusho Kadota, the film is both a poignant drama as well as faithful retelling of the latest nuclear disaster in our history.
General Info
Directed by: Setsuro Wakamatsu Starring: Koichi Sato, Ken Watanabe, Hidetaka Yoshioka
Language: Japanese Original Title: フクシマフィフティ Runtime: 120 min
Synopsis
March 11, 2011. The Tohoku earthquake generates a massive tsunami which is supposed to hit the Fukushima Daiichi Power Plant. The authorities are confident that nothing bad will happen because the plant is well-prepared for such emergencies. However, the tsunami is much bigger than it was estimated. It hits the plant and cuts off the electrical power. Workers at the plant led by the site superintendent, Masao Yoshida (Ken Watanabe), and the shift supervisor, Toshio Isaki (Koichi Sato), do everything they can in order to prevent a nuclear meltdown. Meanwhile, residents living within a 20km radius of the power plant are being evacuated.
Desperate Measures
I vividly remember the day when I got back from high school, turned on TV and saw dramatic news reports from Japan about the Tohoku earthquake. However, the news about Fukushima started coming in a few days later. Unable to gather what exactly happened there just from the mainstream media, I turned to documentaries, but still found it very hard to understand the complexities which led to level 7 meltdowns in three reactors at Fukushima Daiichi. Thankfully, the movie (similarly to other biopics about popular disasters like the Charnobyl (2019) miniseries or Deep Water Horizon (2016)) lays out everything in a clear, step-by-step fashion.
Evidently, the story of Fukushima 50 is the story about brave workers at the plant who did not abandon their posts and did everything they could to prevent the contamination of half of Japanese soil. Additionally, the movie focuses on profit-oriented executives completely oblivious to the situation at Fukushima, and on the families living in the plant’s vicinity forced to abandon their homes. Some could think that the inclusion of so many characters, apart from the plant workers, is unnecessary, but the story of Fukushima is theirs story as well.
Watching the film is certainly a powerful experience because it is a dramatisation of real-life events. With regard as to how the filmmakers handled and presented this sensitive topic which is still fresh in Japanese hearts, I dare to say that the film communicates the anti-nuclear message much better than the fictional Pandora film from 2016.
With regard to performances, both Koichi Sato and Ken Watanabe are a class act. I also appreciated the supporting parts of such well-known actors and actresses as Hidetaka Yoshioka, Narumi Yasuda, Yasuko Tomita, Shiro Sano, Masane Tsukayama, and Dankan.
Recommendations
If you want to know more about the history behind Fukushima Daiichi, then I recommend Setsuro Wakamatsu’s Fukushima 50. Indeed, it is a well-made film that will provide you with valuable pieces of information and subsequent food for thought. I sincerely hope that international communities will learn from Fukushima’s tragedy and implement necessary safety precautions at power plants.
Overall score: 8/10
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