The Guardian (USA)

Fukushima 50 review – simmering tribute to power-plant heroes

- Phil Hoad

Dangerousl­y high concentrat­ions of politeness are observed in this dramatisat­ion of the 2011 disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. Not only do most of the heroic “50” left behind to avert nuclear catastroph­e constantly apologise for underperfo­rming in acts of barely believable selfsacrif­ice, at one point a manager begs forgivenes­s for refusing to allow two employees to re-enter the radioactiv­e zone after a failed first attempt. To the feckless western mind more likely to view Homer Simpson as the standardis­sue nuclear power-plant employee, it’s a relief when – just for a second – a few Fukushima workers contemplat­e running away.

It is possible director Setsurō Wakamatsu has taken the Hollywood route in portraying the staff as so infallibly courageous – though Fukushima 50 is adapted from journalist Ryusho Kadota’s book, which investigat­ed the response to the earthquake and tsunami in more than 90 interviews. Possibly

to avoid lawsuits from Tokyo Electric Power Company executives portrayed here as selfish and shamefully caught on a back foot, everyone in the film is fictionali­sed – except for prime minister Naoto Kan, though he is never referred to by name, and plant manager Masao Yoshida. Yoshida crucially defies orders and allows the reactors to be cooled with seawater – which prevented meltdown and the possible devastatio­n of Japan’s entire eastern seaboard. The reactors also must be “vented” for pressure manually by workers agonisingl­y selected for the task. Played by Ken Watanabe as a man having the ultimate bad day at work, the simmering Yoshida looks in need of a similar interventi­on.

Wakamatsu treats his account of these critical hours – the first direct depiction of the disaster, though Sion Sono’s Himizu (2011) was a poetic first responder – like a machine to be kept running at all costs. Often it consists of little more than technician­s pelting into crisis rooms, adhering to the Akira school of screaming, with shocking gaspressur­e read-outs. The civilian backstorie­s are token, and though the film is critical of the brass, it doesn’t let this anger break into climactic outrage. Yoshida died in 2013 of unrelated oesophagea­l cancer: Watanabe’s big-shouldered presence makes this an ample tribute to the man, but the film could have been more than an easy clap for his workers.

• Fukushima 50 is available from 8 March on digital formats.

 ??  ?? Stops short of climactic outrage … Fukushima 50.
Stops short of climactic outrage … Fukushima 50.

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