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Ian Wolf
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Britain gets a release of Japan's first anime feature film. Shame the film is wartime propaganda aimed at children.
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Well, "entering Japan" against Japan's own wishes to force trade with them under threat of destruction, so I think that depiction may be fair. It may even be referring to the fact that Japan's entry into WWII was largely caused by trade sanctions, drawing parallels between the Westerners of the 19th Century who forced Japan into a disadvantageous trading relationship and those of the 20th Century who then cut off trade with Japan to stifle their political and military aims. Not that any of that is an excuse for the way Japan was behaving in China (which is what caused the sanctions) but just to put it in some political context.The “black ships” is the term used by Japan for western vessels entering Japan when the country had shut its borders, and in the film the black ship is portrayed as a pirate ship.