Rotten Tomatoes
Cancel Movies Tv shows Shop News Showtimes

The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom

Play trailer The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom TV-PG 2011 39m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
Tomatometer 0 Reviews 95% Popcornmeter 50+ Ratings
Following the earthquake and subsequent tsunami that devastated Japan in 2011, the arrival of cherry-blossom season is a beacon of hope to survivors in even the hardest-hit areas.

Where to Watch

The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom

Audience Reviews

View All (4) audience reviews
Audience Member Very inspiring documentary Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/09/23 Full Review Audience Member great mix of beauty and disaster Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/18/23 Full Review Audience Member Directed by Lucy Walker (Waste Land), with the affecting tones of Moby as the soundtrack â" â~The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossomâ(TM) deserves its Oscar nomination, delivering a profoundly tragic and heartfelt documentary of ruined lives and eternal hope. In March of 2011, I was on air with my radio segment, when the images of the Japan Tsunami reached the Australian media. At the same time, frightened residents in Japan captured on camera the arrival of the Tsunami in their home town, destroying their village and residents. One of those jarring pieces of footage begins this documentary. The opening 10 minutes is as disturbing as any film I have ever seen. Shot from high upon a hill, residents are seen running to escape the wall of water, as they try to scramble up the embankments. Some go back down the hill to rescue nursing home patients. Lucy Walker takes us into the heart of the devastation no less than one month after the Tsunami. We meet residents who each handle grief in their own way. A couple, who return to the remains of their house each day, to sit amongst the debris. A man who collect photographs and gravestones he finds, hoping someone will come for them. We meet an elderley gentleman, emotionally weighed down by what he saw and the friend he could not save. â~I dont want clothesâ(TM), he pleads, â~I just want his life backâ(TM). The closest one has to life returning is through the Cherry Blossom trees. A constant symbol in Japan, of hope, of fond memories of better times, of the coming of Spring. Lucy Walkerâ(TM)s skillful and sincere direction allows her to illicit from her inteview subjects, genuine emotions on how the Cherry Blossoms have affected the Japanese people and how they now look to them for emotional reassurance. Two completely different forces of nature are woven together in â~The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossomâ(TM). It is heartbreaking on an unimagineable scale. Through the survivors own words, through the dying of the blossoms to the ground, something stirs within the viewer. The days wonâ(TM)t be as dark as they were. Shakened, I returned to the opening frames of the movie. Disturbed by the Tsunamiâ(TM)s devastation, I never noticed in the foreground of the home movie, the bare Cherry Blossom trees, awaiting a different arrival. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/18/23 Full Review Audience Member http://filmreviewsnsuch.blogspot.com/2012/02/2012-oscar-nominated-shorts.html Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/25/23 Full Review Read all reviews
The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom

My Rating

Read More Read Less POST RATING WRITE A REVIEW EDIT REVIEW

Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis Following the earthquake and subsequent tsunami that devastated Japan in 2011, the arrival of cherry-blossom season is a beacon of hope to survivors in even the hardest-hit areas.
Director
Lucy Walker
Producer
Kira Carstensen
Rating
TV-PG
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
Japanese
Release Date (Streaming)
Apr 25, 2019
Runtime
39m
Most Popular at Home Now