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Grand Sumo: Not one, but two Yokozuna

Grand Sumo: Not one, but two Yokozuna

NHKa day ago
For the first time in years, Grand Sumo has two Yokozuna. And the fans can't wait until they face off. NHK World's Shibuya Aki and Raja Pradhan look ahead to this month's tournament in Nagoya.
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Japan Day celebrated at World Expo in Osaka
Japan Day celebrated at World Expo in Osaka

NHK

time26 minutes ago

  • NHK

Japan Day celebrated at World Expo in Osaka

The 2025 World Expo in Osaka, western Japan, celebrated Japan Day on Thursday, with a presentation combining traditional and contemporary performing arts. Japan's Crown Prince Akishino, Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru and representatives from various countries attended the event. The stage program included a performance of gagaku, or Imperial court music, and a projection mapping of manga featuring Myaku-Myaku, the 2025 World Expo official character. There was also a performance fusing contemporary dance and manga. Actor Fujiwara Norika, who serves as the honorary director of the Japan Pavilion, read out a message about the region's restoration from a major earthquake in 1995. The event ended with a live performance by popular Japanese singer Misia, who sang three songs. Following the ceremony, the Hello Kitty character, a popular regional mascot named Kumamon and people clad in kimono walked underneath the Grand Ring, a huge structure built as the symbol of the expo.

‘I Am Kirishima' peels back the mystery of a fugitive radical
‘I Am Kirishima' peels back the mystery of a fugitive radical

Japan Times

time4 hours ago

  • Japan Times

‘I Am Kirishima' peels back the mystery of a fugitive radical

Films about Japanese radicals of the 1970s who hijacked airplanes, blew up buildings and murdered each other in the name of ideological purity may strike younger viewers as unfolding in an alternative universe. But filmmakers like Banmei Takahashi ('Rain of Light,' 2001), Koji Wakamatsu ('United Red Army,' 2007) and Masao Adachi ('The Escape,' 2025), who knew that turbulent time firsthand, have earnestly tried to make it understandable to succeeding generations, while being faithful to the stories of their extremist protagonists. That is also true of Takahashi's latest, 'I Am Kirishima,' a strongly rooted, deliberately paced drama about the underground existence of Satoshi Kirishima, a former member of the East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front (EAAJAF) whose smiling face was featured on wanted posters for half a century. Takahashi's film is more straightforward than Adachi's Kirishima biopic, 'The Escape,' which scrambles chronology and flirts with surrealism. It is, however, similarly in ideological rapport with its eponymous character, played in an outwardly tamped-down, inwardly seething performance by Katsuya Maiguma. Neither film probably would have been made if Kirishima, who was 21 when he went on the run in 1975, had not evaded capture until January 2024, when he revealed his true identity while in a hospital being treated for terminal cancer. He died four days later, his sensational revelation making national news. Co-scripted by Takahashi and Aki Kajiwara, the film starts with a rather plodding, if needed, primer on the actions and beliefs of the EAAJAF after Kirishima joined it, including the September 1974 bombing of the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries headquarters building in Tokyo that resulted in six deaths. Though Kirishima shared the rage of his comrades at Japanese corporations that exploited their workers, both foreign and domestic, he was against killing, as the film takes pains to emphasize. After conspiring to blow up buildings belonging to a major construction company, Kirishima is shown wracked with remorse when he learns that one explosion injured a security guard. Be that as it may, once police begin scooping up EAAJAF members, including Hisaichi Ugajin (Eita Okuno), Kirishima's one real friend in the group, he changes his name to Hiroshi Uchida and disappears into the netherworld of day-labor jobs, where IDs are not required. In the 1980s, he finds a home of sorts at a small construction company in Kanagawa Prefecture run by an uninquisitive boss, but as he enters middle age, Kirishima feels trapped in his lonely, tedious existence. Romantic sparks fly between 'Uyan' (Kirishima's nickname) and Keena (Kana Kita), a singer at a local pub whose plaintive version of the 1986 pop hit 'Jidai Okure' ('Behind the Times') warms his heart, but he knows that marriage is out. 'I can never make anyone happy,' he tells her. Much later, by now an old man, he bridles at the casual anti-Korean remarks of a blonde new hire — an indication that, though his gait has slowed and his hair has turned gray, his core values remain as fiercely alive as ever. Whether 'I Am Kirishima' exposes the truth behind the youthful mug that once grinned from thousands of police boxes remains a question since so little is known about the man. Perhaps, after decades of living behind a mask, Kirishima himself had only a weak grasp of his pre-fugitive self. But as his deathbed confession dramatically shows, he also never totally lost it.

Japan to take on Wales in 'Battle of the Bad' two-test rugby series
Japan to take on Wales in 'Battle of the Bad' two-test rugby series

Japan Today

time5 hours ago

  • Japan Today

Japan to take on Wales in 'Battle of the Bad' two-test rugby series

rugby union By Fred Varcoe Japan will face Wales in two rugby union test matches this month in a series that could be called the 'Battle of the Bad,' with both teams suffering poor results in the last couple of years. Wales have lost an incredible 17 straight test matches – a record for a top-level national team – and they dumped coach Warren Gatland in February after they were beaten 22-15 in the Six Nations by Italy. Adam Sherratt is in temporary charge. Wales showed some spirit in his first two games at the helm, losing 27-18 to Ireland and 35-29 to Scotland, but were humiliated 68-14 at home when they faced England. Gatland was meant to bring some glory back to a country where rugby is the national sport. In his first stint in charge, Wales won the Grand Slam in the Six Nations Championship in 2019 and reached the semifinals of the World Cup in Japan, narrowly losing out to eventual champions South Africa 19-16. That World Cup marked the end of Gatland's first spell in charge and under Wayne Pivac, the team still managed to clinch the Six Nations title in 2021. They were knocked out of the quarterfinals at the 2023 World Cup by Argentina and have won only one game since, a 49-26 victory against the Barbarians. This year started off with one of the most humiliating results of all, a 43-0 loss against France. Wales have slumped to No. 12 in the World Rankings – one spot above Japan – six years after they were ranked the No. 1 team in the world. They will come to Japan knowing they have won 13 of the 14 matchups between the two countries, with Japan's sole win coming in 2013, a 23-8 victory in Tokyo. Then, as now, the coach of the Japanese team was Eddie Jones, who was guiding Japan to World Cup glory in 2015 when he led the team to what has often been termed 'the biggest upset in rugby union history.' The dramatic 34-32 victory over South Africa stunned the rugby world, but, more importantly, it set the team on a path of upward development and gave rugby a massive boost in Japan. Japan hosted a glorious World Cup in 2019 and the home team, under the guidance of Jamie Joseph, won all four of their group games, scoring spectacular wins over Ireland (19-12) and Scotland (28-21), and becoming the first Asian team to reach the quarterfinals. Like Wales at the same tournament, they lost to eventual winners South Africa. The important thing for Japanese rugby after that wonderful World Cup was to keep the momentum going, but that doesn't seem to have happened. Jones was brought back to Japan a year and a half ago to try and recreate his previous 'miracle,' but results haven't gone well, with the team losing seven of their last 11 games. The latest setback was a 53-20 loss to the Maori All Blacks at the end of June. Jones termed it a 'big loss' but said it gave his young team 'a lot of good lessons.' Jones has never hidden his dislike for the rugby setup in Japan, with a massive disconnect between the universities and club teams (formerly company teams), and the need to provide top-class rugby and opposition to groom his players to a higher level. "For a lot of these guys, it's their first game above League One, so it's a much higher level of game," he said after June's loss. After his reappointment in January last year, Jones told Kyodo News: 'My job is to win, 100 percent, but I came back to Japan because I want to build a base for Japan going forward. The next three years is about creating a team that can beat a top-10 team in the world.' Japan's tests against Wales will be their first matches this year and the squad includes 16 uncapped players. Wales, too, will come with a somewhat depleted squad, but both sides will be desperate for a win. 'It's massive,' Welsh hooker Dewi Lake said. 'They're a dangerous side and caused a lot of upsets in recent memory. We're by no means underestimating the edge they're going to bring. We know they play with very quick ball. It's our job to slow it down as they'll want to play with speed.' A pair of wins for either team will give them a shot in the arm. Whether or not that will lead to the hoped-for revival of their fortunes remains to be seen. Both teams have a lot riding on the series. Japan-Wales, July 5, 14:00, Mikuni World Stadium, Kitakyushu Japan-Wales, July 12, 14:50, Noevir Stadium, Kobe © Japan Today

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