Visas and Virtue
Visas and Virtue | |
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File:VISASposter.jpg
One-sheet photography: Dennis Mukai
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Directed by | Chris Tashima |
Produced by | Chris Donahue Tim Toyama |
Written by | Chris Tashima Tom Donaldson Tim Toyama (play) |
Starring | Chris Tashima Susan Fukuda Diana Georger Lawrence Craig |
Narrated by | Shizuko Hoshi |
Music by | Scott Nagatani |
Cinematography | Hiro Narita, A.S.C. |
Edited by | Irvin Paik |
Release dates
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1997 |
Running time
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26 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Visas and Virtue is a 1997 narrative short film inspired by the true story of Holocaust rescuer Chiune "Sempo" Sugihara, who is known as "The Japanese Schindler". Sugihara issued over 2,000 transit visas to Polish and Lithuanian Jews from his consulate in Kaunas, Lithuania, in August 1940, in defiance of his own government (Japan), thereby allowing an estimated 6,000 individuals to escape the impending Holocaust.
Background
This film is a dramatization (docu-drama)[1] and contains fictional characters and events. It is not a documentary. It is based on an original one-act play by Tim Toyama, which was performed at The Road Theatre Company[2] in Los Angeles in 1995.[3] The play was then adapted by actor/director Chris Tashima in 1996, and completed as a 26-minute film in 1997. The film was produced by Cedar Grove Productions with Visual Communications serving as non-profit sponsor.[4]
Visas and Virtue won the Academy Award for Live Action Short Film in March, 1998 (70th Academy Awards). The Oscar statuettes went to actor and director Tashima and producer Chris Donahue.[5]
Synopsis
Haunted by the sight of hundreds of Jewish refugees outside the consulate gates, a Japanese diplomat and his wife, stationed in Kaunas, Lithuania, at the beginning of World War II, must decide how much they are willing to risk. Inspired by a true story, Visas and Virtue explores the moral and professional dilemmas that Consul General Chiune “Sempo” Sugihara faces in making a life or death decision: defy his own government’s direct orders and risk his career, by issuing life-saving transit visas, or obey orders and turn his back on humanity.
Cast
- Chris Tashima as Chiune "Sempo" Sugihara
- Susan Fukuda as Yukiko Sugihara
- Diana Georger as Helena Rosen
- Lawrence Craig as Nathan Rosen
- Shizuko Hoshi as Narrator
(In order of appearance)
Japan, 1985
- Mitsushi Yamaguchi as Elderly Sempo
- Kyoko Motoyama as Elderly Yuki
Lithuania, 1940
- Colm Wood as Student #1
- Eric Gugisch as German Officer
- Alan H. Friedenthal as Refugee #1
- Patricia Penn as Refugee #2
- Richard Nakaoka, Weston Yanagihara as Sugihara Children
- Linda Igarashi as Setsuko
- Jimmy Paola as Student #2
- Kimberly Mungovan as Sugihara Baby
Refugees at Interviews
- Martin Fontana as Man
- Noel Miller as Young Man
- David Russ as Elderly Man
- Maria Stanton as Wife
- Jude Gerard Prest as Husband
- Shauna Bloom as Woman
- Gibson Frazier as Cantor
- Jon Cellini, Jonathan Klein as Brothers
- Pamela Tretter as Mother
- Jack Newalu as Man at Train Station
Special Appearance
- Hanni Vogelweid as Elderly Woman at Interview
Awards
(partial list)
- Academy Award for Live Action Short Film – 70th Academy Awards[5]
- 1st Place: Fiction Prize – USA Film Festival/Dallas
- "Francisco Garcia de Paso" Award – Huesca International Short Film Contest
- Crystal Heart Award – Heartland Film Festival[6]
- CINE Golden Eagle[7]
- Special Jury Prize – Competition for Films and Videos on Japan
- "Adriano Morais" Award – Algarve International Film Festival
- Golden Shoestring Award – Rochester International Film Festival
- Best Short Film – Sonoma Valley Film Festival
References
- ↑ Visas and Virtue - SPIKE Powered By IFILM
- ↑ Brief History on Road Theatre site
- ↑ Visas and Virtue in CSUN newsletter; Vol. II, No. 16 - 5/11/99
- ↑ productions at Visual Communications site
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 70th Oscars winners on IndieWire
- ↑ Heartland Film Festival award winner history on IMDb
- ↑ 1997 CINE winner list
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- English-language films
- 1997 films
- 1990s biographical films
- 1990s short films
- Japanese-American films
- American biographical films
- American films
- Films based on actual events
- Films based on plays
- Films set in the 1940s
- Holocaust films
- Jewish Japanese history
- Jewish Lithuanian history
- Live Action Short Film Academy Award winners
- World War II films