• Films
  • Bio
    • Steven Okazaki
    • Filmography
    • Top Ten
  • MISC
    • News
    • Pix
    • Crew
  • WATCH
  • Contact

FARALLON FILMS

Award-winning films by Steven Okazaki

  • Films
  • Bio
    • Steven Okazaki
    • Filmography
    • Top Ten
  • MISC
    • News
    • Pix
    • Crew
  • WATCH
  • Contact

White Light/Black Rain:Interview Profiles

  KIYOKO IMORI  was 11 years old at the time. She and her best friend had just arrived at school and were changing their shoes in a below ground concrete structure when the bomb exploded over Hiroshima. When they emerged, the school was gone and thei
  SHIGEKO SASAMORI  was 13 years old. She shielded her eyes to look at the B-29 flying over Hiroshima, then the blast knocked her unconscious. She woke up dazed and badly burned. She found her way to a schoolyard and lay down under a tree. Unrecogniz
  KEIJI NAKAZAWA , 6 years old at the time, lost his father, sister and younger brother in the Hiroshima bombing. In shock, his pregnant mother gave birth to a baby girl on the day of the bombing. The infant, named Tomoko, died four months later. Lat
  YASUYO TANAKA  and  CHIEMI OKA  were 9 and 10 years old, living in a Catholic orphanage. Close friends, devoted Catholics, they found each other after the blast, faced extraordinary hardship together, but managed to survive. The orphanage housed mo
  SAKUE SHIMOHIRA  was 10 years old. She lost her mother and brother in the Nagasaki bombing. Later, her sister committed suicide by stepping in front of a train. For 10 years, Shimohira lived with a dozen other homeless survivors in a small shack in
  KATSUJI YOSHIDA , 13 at the time, remembers feeling the force of the Nagasaki blast and flying more than 100 feet through the air. One side of his face was horribly burned and disfigured. Even in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, survivors with external scar
  SUNAO TSUBOI  was a 20-year-old university student in Hiroshima when the bomb was dropped. He notes that the art and literature students were drafted into the army first, before science majors like him. But he says he was ready to go to war, to die
  SHUNTARO HIDA , a 28-year-old military doctor at the time, was a safe distance from the Hiroshima bomb. He began treating people immediately after the bombing. Later, patients who should have been getting better began dying. He says, "We didn't kno
  SATORU FUKAHORI , 11 years old at the time, said that even as children in Nagasaki, they knew Japan was losing the war. "Any fool could see it," he says. "We had nothing. We needed everything." He says that people who were exposed to the bomb becam
  PAN YEON KIM  was 8 years old. Her family, like many poor Koreans at the time, immigrated to Japan, to avoid starvation. After the Hiroshima bombing, Koreans survivors faced further prejudice and additional hardship, so her family returned to Korea
  ETSUKO NAGANO , 16 years old at the time, lost her brother and sister in the bombing. She says she still can't forgive herself for convincing her family to move to Nagasaki, just weeks before the bombing.
  SENJI YAMAGUCHI  was 14 years old when the bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. He was unconscious for 40 days. During his long hospitalization, he started a survivors' organization to lobby the Japanese government to provide care to victims of the bombin
  SUMITERU TANIGUCHI , then a 16-year-old mail carrier in Nagasaki, was about to deliver a letter when the bomb was dropped. He was badly burned on the face, arms and back. Strangely, the wounds on his back never healed and he lives with perpetual pa
  MORRIS JEPPSON , 23 at the time, was the weapon test officer on the Enola Gay mission to Hiroshima. His job was to arm the bomb in flight, making him the last person to touch the bomb before its detonation. Today he says, "I see the risk of radioac
  LAWRENCE JOHNSTON , a 21-year-old civilian scientist working at Los Alamos, worked on the team that developed the detonators for the Fat Man bomb. He believes he is the only person to witness all three of the first atomic explosions: Trinity, Hiros
  HAROLD AGNEW , 24 at the time, worked on the Manhattan Project in Chicago and Los Alamos. He flew as a scientific observer on the Hiroshima mission, capturing the unforgettable image of the rising mushroom cloud with a home movie camera.
  THEODORE "DUTCH" VAN KIRK , 24 years old then, was the navigator aboard the Enola Gay for the Hiroshima mission. Captain Paul Tibbets told him that the bomb they were about to drop would probably shorten or end the war. Although he believes that dr