Nanking Movie Review
Nanking Review
"Nanking" Overview

Rating: NR
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Bill Guttentag,Dan SturmanProducer : Bill Guttentag,Michael Jacobs,Ted Leonsis
Screenwiter : Bill Guttentag,Dan Sturman
Starring : Hugo Armstrong,Rosalind Chao,Stephen Dorff,Jon Getz,Woody Harrelson,Mariel Hemingway,Michelle Krusiec,Chris Mulkey,Jurgen Prochnow,Sonny Saito,Graham Sibley,Mark Valley,Robert Wu
Four years before Pearl Harbor, Japan was already on the march in China,
grabbing territory in its quest for imperial expansion. After Shanghai fell,
Japanese troops set their sights on Nanking, the capital of China at the time.
It was just 160 miles up the Yangtze River.
The events later known as the rape of Nanking happened quickly, over just six
horrific weeks at the end of 1937 and into 1938, and because the city was so
cut off at the time and the war went on for eight more years, much of the story
went untold for decades. It wasn't until writer Iris Chang documented the
tragedy in her 1998 book The Rape of Nanking that the true scope of the horror
was made apparent. It was that book that inspired Nanking, a highly effective
documentary that uses interesting techniques to tell its remarkable story.
While 200,000 civilians and soldiers died in Nanking and perhaps 20,000 women
were raped in those six weeks, the toll would have been much higher had it not
been for a group of 22 foreigners who lived and worked in Nanking and who set
out to create a sort of safety zone where refugees from the bombed-out city
could be protected. In the film, these brave people are portrayed by actors in
costume who read their diary entries into the camera. Most prominent are Mariel
Hemingway as Minnie Vautrin, a professor at a women's college whose goal was to
save her students; Woody Harrelson as Bob Wilson, one of the last doctors in
Nanking; and Jurgen Prochnow as John Rabe, a Nazi businessman who became the de
facto mayor of the safety zone.
Interspersed with their testimony are stories from actual Nanking survivors,
now old and withered, who recount nightmares of rape, murder, and mass
executions. One man recalls seeing both his mother and baby brother bayoneted.
A woman, 12 at the time, remembers allowing herself to be raped to save the
life of her grandfather, who was trying to protect her from the Japanese. A
third witness says a soldier took a huge sword and split his sister in two
vertically, from head to toe. Rare footage shot by the foreigners and smuggled
out at the time (to disbelief and indifference, it should be noted) is almost
unbearable to watch.
Nanking is an important historical record, and it's lucky that the interviews
with the eloquent survivors took place before it was too late. It won't be long
before all the eyewitnesses are gone. If the film has a flaw, it's that it
can't help but put a bit of a Schindler's List spin on the whole tragedy,
looking for that glimmer of goodness within the horror and finding it in the
foreigners, whom the Chinese survivors describe as "divine." A few questions,
such as why the Japanese felt the need to be so inhumane, why they didn't
simply kill the foreigners and wipe out the safety zone, and what happened in
Nanking throughout the rest of the war, go pretty much unanswered. But that's
forgivable. What's important is that the stories have been captured and can be
shared with future generations who will need to learn what urban warfare is
really like.
Well, it's dark.
Reviewer: Don Willmott



