On August 6 and 9, 1945, the uranium atomic bomb named "Little Boy" and the plutonium atomic bomb named "Fatty" landed on Hiroshima and Nagasaki respectively. These two atomic bombs ended World War II early, and many people died in the world because of this. However, hundreds of thousands of people died of this "new bomb" in two cities in Japan. At the same time, it also made other countries in the world realize the power of the atomic bomb, making the atomic bomb a deterrent force that dare not be easily used in war, and Japan became the only country to accept atomic bombing.
This uniqueness will inevitably leave a deep mark in the Japanese national genes and affect their society and culture. On the occasion of the 70th anniversary of Japan's nuclear bombing, Japanese literary critic Kawamura summarized and sorted out the impact of the "nuclear explosion" in Japan's film, television, literature and other related cultural fields, and this book "The Seventy Years of Nuclear Sorrow in Japan".

is the most famous movie image in Japanese films and TV series, and the impact of the nuclear explosion is Godzilla. The background of its emergence is that the American hydrogen bomb experiment awakened the sleeping carnivorous dinosaur Godzilla and began a journey of destruction to Tokyo and Japan. The Godzilla series of movies are popular all over the world, and we Chinese are also impressed by this image. It began Japan's precedent for thinking about "nuclearity". After it, a series of images of nuclear explosions appeared in Japanese film and television and literary works, including Mushroom Man Matango, Liquid Man, etc. They reflect Japan's fear of nuclear power and its deep thinking that it will bring disaster to humanity.

Nuclear fear is part of Japanese culture, but nuclear energy utilization is also a problem that Japan is thinking about. For Japan, a country with energy shortage, peaceful use of nuclear energy is their inevitable choice. Japan's numerous nuclear power plants are the most powerful proof. The image of film and television peacefully using nuclear energy began with Astro Boy. Although in a strict sense, Astro Bo cannot be regarded as a clear example of nuclear utilization, his appearance was when Japan proposed to build a new nuclear power plant. The core of Astro Bo's vision is to have a "small nuclear engine", and the safe and stable image he created undoubtedly provides the most powerful guarantee for the safety of nuclear energy.

Japanese culture is developing in the interweaving of two contradictions such as nuclear energy application. Even their large number of nuclear-independent films and TV series still directly and indirectly map factors about nuclear disasters. "The Valley of the Wind" we are more familiar with does not mention any factors about nuclear disasters, but why it creates its atmosphere? The "Seven Days of Fire" set in his background is still very similar to nuclear war . Nuclear fear is constantly raised in this country.
On March 11, 2011, a leak accident occurred in Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant due to an earthquake, and this accident became a disaster for Japan to apply nuclear energy. Fukushima has attracted the attention of the world so far, and the thinking about nuclear energy has continued to continue, which has always affected Japan and even the world's cognition, and this cognition will continue to be reflected in film and television or literary works. #core# #core security# #maintainer# #mainly recommended bookmaker#