Regionalism
This report analyzes regionalism in several contexts as they pertain to the movie Snow Falling on Cedars. The movie is pervasively filled with considerations relating to regionalism, outsiders vs. insiders, how insiders and outsiders mesh and the very dicey results that can ensue, how all of this plays off of national and international situations and conflicts and so forth. This movie establishes that many unique and different things can influence who interacts with who, how and why and the things that impact all of this are not just limited to race and nationality.
Movie Setting & Synopsis
The year and country this film is set in has a ton to do with why people feel the way they do and why there is such a bred animosity towards Kabuo, to the point that his guilt is almost assumed and someone very important in the movie actually withholds information that would exonerate him. The war is set roughly one and a half decades after Pearl Harbor in the Washington state area. This becomes extremely relevant because a white fisherman ends up drowning to death under very unclear and very mysterious circumstances and the main suspect has a seemingly obvious motive to kill the dead man.
But before getting into the minutia of the trial and how it all ends up, how the movie sets the tone and the mood. The colors are very stark and very pale. The look and feel of the early fishing scenes set the tone, showing a very pale environment that is borderline depressing just at the sight. The paleness of Hatsue's skin when Ethan Hawke's character Ishmael tries to talk to her and her cold demeanor to match just drive that point home further, although it becomes quite clear as the movie goes on why she was so cold to him.
Something else that is established quite early is that the white fishermen in the area are very anti-Japanese. They are clearly bigoted against people like Kabuo just because of his race. The collection of men talking with the sheriff make it quite clear early on that they assume that Kabuo is guilty. It is so blunt that an actual racial slur is uttered in clear earshot of everyone. It is clear that the fishermen are very close-knit and very likeminded. The people native and perceived to be home residents of the town are obviously have a bond that is very strong, even if that bond is built on a lot of negative feelings and behaviors. However, the bond of these white fishermen is not just limited to Japanese and other racial minorities but also pertains to any other perceived threats to their camaraderie as well. The reporter Ishmael approaching the group as they talk with the sheriff makes them noticeably react in a very negative way. Perhaps that has something to do with the fact that Ishmael was previously in a relationship with the aforementioned Katuse but that is not made clear at the time.
There is also a collection of Japanese-Americans and other immigrants in the area and they coalesce around each other as well. There is very much a dichotomous relationship in the area as the Caucasians of the area stick together while the Japanese form their own group. However, as will be made clear throughout this work, these two groups intersect and interact in ways that are not expected to be the case even with the very tenuous and sometimes vitriolic nature of the relationship.
That being said, most of the arcs and tangents in this film and how they play together center on Japanese/American tensions post World War II. Kabuo's family had previously entered an agreement to purchase land from the father of the dead fisherman but the untimely death of Carl Heine Sr. lead to his widow reneging on the agreement even though all but two payments were made and the only reason the payments stopped was because the family was sent to an internment camp. Even with that, the person who ended up getting the land instead eventually had a stroke and decided to sell but Carl Jr. had beaten him to it. Even so, Carl Jr. tentatively agreed to sell him the parcel that was originally promised to Kabuo's father but was undecided mostly because of his own prejudice against the Japanese. The voyage he took to sea while considering this is when he died and even though a wake of a freighter knocking him off the boat is what caused him to drown, a blood-soaked piece of wood seemed to implicate Kabuo, with the motive being related to the land sale.
Ishmael eventually...
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