The Human Face of Japan (1982) - Japanese society in early 1980s

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  • čas přidán 23. 03. 2022
  • A documentary on early 1980s Japan.
    Produced by Film Australia.
    #history
    #Japan
    #1980s
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 115

  • @hellman9655
    @hellman9655 Před 2 lety +133

    It’s amazing how this video referred to Japan as overpopulated. How much things can change in 40 years is amazing. Really enjoyed the film thanks for posting this. Peace from the USA

    • @noreenanthony-tabar2148
      @noreenanthony-tabar2148 Před 2 lety +11

      But Japan then like now is still ahead of other countries with robots doing the work, not people. Japan's tech is so much ahead of the rest of the world it is amazing.

    • @joegee6434
      @joegee6434 Před rokem +16

      Even though their population is in decline, its still one of the most densely populated countries in the world.

    • @DrAhzek
      @DrAhzek Před rokem +5

      @@noreenanthony-tabar2148 You'd be surprised how little actual automation there is in Japan in comparison to other countries these days.
      During my time there I realized how, despite all the opportunities, they still decide to use human labour where you'd already put machines to do the work. And even if they do put robots somewhere, it's nothing more than a marketing gimmick that is still supported by way too many people.
      Also, sadly, Japan is slowly getting left behind in terms of many things. IT sector is a huge, uncreative mess, reminding me of 90s, maybe early 2000s. Cashless payments, something that is common in other countries these days, is almost a magical concept to the Japanese (unless you include prepaid IC cards...which are only good for commuting and not much else). I mean, I can easily pay for flowers bought from an elderly lady in any smaller city in Poland, using just my phone, to do a mobile instant money transfer with no additional fee. All done in less than 15s....While at the same time, in Japan, I can't even use credit card or their prepaid IC cards to pay for an entrance to HALF of the cultural places like museums or shrines because REASONS...

    • @agustingonzaloalzogaray79
      @agustingonzaloalzogaray79 Před rokem +10

      ​​@@DrAhzek cash is freedom

    • @DrAhzek
      @DrAhzek Před rokem +2

      @@agustingonzaloalzogaray79 that would be fine in america but in japan it’s just unwilingness to change, not wish for freedom

  • @paulonm2097
    @paulonm2097 Před 9 dny +3

    1982...a magical year. So many good things not only in Japan...Akira's Katsuhiro Otomo, good music, films....wow 😊.

  • @KoboldGamer
    @KoboldGamer Před 7 měsíci +25

    Loved this, great to see into early 80s japan. I'd like to see a "Where are they now?" sort of deal. By now, Kentaro is in his mid 40s, Kimura and his wife are probably around 70-ish. Hearing Shinjuku being this up and coming thing made me life knowing how much of a powerhouse of media it is now.

    • @skylinefever
      @skylinefever Před 5 dny

      I kind of wonder how many are an an early grave due to karoshi.

  • @TheMalfean
    @TheMalfean Před 22 dny +5

    There is simply no place like Japan on earth. It is a marvelous, magical, mystical place.

  • @AckzaTV
    @AckzaTV Před 9 měsíci +31

    their industrial post war journey to an almost militarized peace economy is one of the most incredible stories of human progress

    • @ilhamrj2599
      @ilhamrj2599 Před 26 dny +8

      but, Japan has already industrialized before WW2…. there was already stock exchange, lively financial sectors, big corporation even before WW2.

  • @anthonybird546
    @anthonybird546 Před 27 dny +16

    I remember visiting family in the 80s as a kid, it was always just a vast, just mind-blowing experience every time. As a kid that was obsessed with transforming robot toys of every kind, I was in heaven. There didn't seem to be a lot of tourists back then. Japan really seemed to be a world of itself back then. The anime felt like this great secret and it was fun to bring them back to America and just seeing my friends' minds just explode from seeing cartoons that they would *never* show after, like, He-Man. 🤣 I remember playing the Famicom well before the NES debuted. I think that while Tokyo was very clean, there was still a grittiness to it that I can't quite explain. I could go to toy stores and just stare, for *hours* at all this amazing shit that I had no reference for. I loved the trains everywhere and the gatchapon seemed just...better, then.

    • @helixator3975
      @helixator3975 Před 12 dny +2

      I lived there in the mid eighties and know what you mean. Rarely saw foreigners and without the internet things like manga, animae and even much of the food was little known in the west.
      The grittiness reference also rings true …. especially for Osaka Kawasaki and Yokohama which were little rough round the edges as befitting cities with manufacturing at their core.

    • @skylinefever
      @skylinefever Před 5 dny +1

      If it wasn't for anime otaku and certain kinds of gamers, I do wonder how many tourists Japan would get.
      My desire to travel there happened because I am a car enthusiast, and certain cars caught my attention. It was 1989, and the Nissan 300ZX Twin Turbo just went on sale. Over there, it would have been known as Z32 Fairlady TT.
      It was the first time I had ever heard of twin turbo. Turbo already sounded like magic to 80s kids. What was twin turbo but even more magic to a kid?
      There are plenty of enthusiasts in the USA who like certain Japanese cars. However, few get a desire to travel there.

  • @jirom5176
    @jirom5176 Před 26 dny +7

    貴重な映像ですね!
    日本から感謝です✨

  • @user-we8vp9tq8e
    @user-we8vp9tq8e Před 26 dny +5

    新しい技術が高層ビルの街新宿で生まれたなどと言っているが、もちろん携帯やスマホなど、この時代はまだ存在していない。忘年会の余興でステレオコンポが当たり感動で泣いた自分がいた。退職したいまは広辞苑などの大型辞書も買わない。スマホ一台で済んでしまうことが多い。80年代は遠い昔か?

  • @Falcon_Serbia
    @Falcon_Serbia Před rokem +21

    Such a beautiful society

  • @Something-Waffle
    @Something-Waffle Před 7 měsíci +8

    Wow, it's so interesting to see what Japan was like before the economic bubble burst.

  • @Jaxymann
    @Jaxymann Před rokem +14

    This is amazing! It's interesting to see that 40 years on, so many things are the same, and yet some are wildly different: the izakayas and hostess bars frequented by the Patriarchal salaryman class remain, and yet social & cultural progress in areas of civic rights and digital freedom have expanded too.

  • @bakerstreet101
    @bakerstreet101 Před měsícem +4

    Good choice of background music.

    • @deadby15
      @deadby15 Před 27 dny +2

      Clearly, a real orchestra was used when it was recorded, unlike these days.

  • @robm7488
    @robm7488 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Wow, awesome video!

  • @HacksignKT
    @HacksignKT Před rokem +25

    I wonder how the family is doing now.

  • @DirtyRobot
    @DirtyRobot Před 21 dnem +2

    Where is Kentaro?
    We must find him.

  • @Shivaismysaviour
    @Shivaismysaviour Před 26 dny +2

    What an absolutely beautiful program . Every country should do a snapshot in time like this.
    But the whole "ayyy don't think so Dianne! " made me laugh my rocks 🪨 🪨 off. "Hello Dianne. "....lol

  • @skylinefever
    @skylinefever Před 5 dny

    I was in kindergarten in 1989. We were told Japan was 10 years in the future. I realized in 2018 that people had at least one picture of Shibuya Crossing when they said it.
    Now I wonder if that is as honest as selling travel to the USA by showing the Las Vegas strip and Times Square.
    I got interested in seeing Japan back then. My mom had a 1985 Nissan Maxima and I loved it. A combination of Knight Rider, Tron, and giant mecha is how it was made. It made me want the Nissan 300ZX Twin Turbo (Z32 Fairlady TT) when it went on sale. To 1980s kids, turbo power sounded like magic. Twin turbo sounded like even more magic to me.

  • @minime725
    @minime725 Před měsícem +1

    First time in japan 1985 in kagoshima sendai since then i love japan

  • @toshi1991
    @toshi1991 Před 25 dny +5

    古き良き日本。

  • @russellschaeffler
    @russellschaeffler Před 26 dny +3

    Wow... Little did they know Kobe would suffer in a giant earthquake just 15 years later in 1995.

  • @137cloud
    @137cloud Před 21 dnem +1

    Japan really is something. I think they are one of the most important countries in the world.

  • @juliebransfield529
    @juliebransfield529 Před 24 dny +3

    Executives smoking cigarettes during meetings lol

  • @lokesh303101
    @lokesh303101 Před 28 dny +3

    Japan is Japan.

  • @gabrielm-art7439
    @gabrielm-art7439 Před 2 lety +27

    I love Japan

  • @tokutraveler9394
    @tokutraveler9394 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Is kimura still around? He making pottery?

  • @Joshua_N-A
    @Joshua_N-A Před rokem +49

    Back when Japan scared the kuso out of America by economy.

    • @allentoyokawa9068
      @allentoyokawa9068 Před 22 dny +1

      They still do

    • @Joshua_N-A
      @Joshua_N-A Před 21 dnem +1

      @@allentoyokawa9068 4th largest, dropped one place. Germany has overtaken the 3rd spot.

    • @skylinefever
      @skylinefever Před 5 dny

      I think about how Japan went from being the country that sold discount junk to the USA to selling all kinds of premium goods.
      I often wonder what the perception would have been like if the Datsun 240Z and related cars (S30 and S130 Fairlady Z) were not invented.

  • @kumardaksh4043
    @kumardaksh4043 Před 9 měsíci +6

    shrine and temples in Japan were beautiful i wish if i have visited in 89s

    • @bakerstreet101
      @bakerstreet101 Před měsícem +3

      They are the same now, except there are now many foreign tourists.

  • @AckzaTV
    @AckzaTV Před 9 měsíci +8

    21:05 that newspaper with the light pen pages of thousands of japanese kanji characters is crazy hah now i see why newspapers only used 2000 characters

  • @Kujir2340
    @Kujir2340 Před 22 dny +3

    When Japan was a superpower

    • @allentoyokawa9068
      @allentoyokawa9068 Před 22 dny

      umm they still are lmao

    • @Kujir2340
      @Kujir2340 Před 20 dny +2

      @@allentoyokawa9068 They’re still rich but they no longer have the world dominance they once had. This was a time when the US had a fear that Japan would overtake them and Japanese companies would buy out the US economy. The 90s recession and the population decline ended all of that.

    • @eijiroinouye4115
      @eijiroinouye4115 Před 19 dny +1

      ​@Kujir2340 Who knows what will happen sir.

  • @fouadbenrezzak8398
    @fouadbenrezzak8398 Před 10 měsíci +11

    the 80s and 90s are the golden age of japan

    • @olafur2463
      @olafur2463 Před 10 měsíci +11

      Not the 90's

    • @stra9761
      @stra9761 Před 10 měsíci +20

      The 70s & 80s are the golden age of japan. The 90's to Current day are Lost Decades

    • @Riu-bw4bl
      @Riu-bw4bl Před 7 měsíci +9

      The 90s was one of the worse decades for a lot of Asia. Suicide rates were one of the worse in history for japan. The bubble of the golden era in the 80s popped and one of the biggest recession hit and brought a lot of hopelessness to the youth and old alike.

  • @brycerichert
    @brycerichert Před 18 dny +1

    And then came the 90’s

  • @treystephens6166
    @treystephens6166 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Only 2 Godzilla movies 1984 & 1989. 🇯🇵

  • @paulonm2097
    @paulonm2097 Před 9 dny

    Nowadays, 2024, Kentaro must be in your 44-47 years old (my age right now).

  • @slametterus3155
    @slametterus3155 Před 24 dny +2

    Japan in 1980 is golden era everytime is party stock and property promised fast money after bubble burts in 1990 and 1991 evertying is change..but japanese real struggle for dignity and honour ...thanks japan

  • @user-cp3ip3rw7r
    @user-cp3ip3rw7r Před 3 dny

    90年代が一番良いよたぶん。

  • @BlackRain_
    @BlackRain_ Před 9 měsíci +4

    25:27 Big massive IBM pyramid! LOL!

  • @TheMichaelkim3
    @TheMichaelkim3 Před 19 dny

    Japan 🇯🇵 is cool!

  • @theboredengineer2947
    @theboredengineer2947 Před 9 měsíci +11

    If only my Japanese husband and I are not outpriced to raise a child in Japan in 2023, we would definitely have 3 kids and have a happy family. We don't want to bring a child in this depressing world these days.

    • @rikiishitoru8885
      @rikiishitoru8885 Před 7 měsíci

      The world is doing better than you think
      Modern medicine alone is proof enough

    • @DirtyRobot
      @DirtyRobot Před 21 dnem

      That kind of mentality will lead to darkness.
      Have as many children as you can and contribute to a better world or just let the idiots out-reproduce you and fill the world with trash humans.

  • @engineeredarmy1152
    @engineeredarmy1152 Před 10 měsíci +16

    economy stagnated, population is declining, people look glum. things have really changed. i miss the 1980s Japan.

    • @fouadbenrezzak8398
      @fouadbenrezzak8398 Před 10 měsíci +6

      innovation died also in every filed big tech companies are falling japan changed a lot

    • @stra9761
      @stra9761 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Mainly because of plaza Accord

    • @F_C...
      @F_C... Před 9 měsíci

      Japan was never that innovative. They used to rip off American products shamelessly just like the Chinese do today.

    • @deadby15
      @deadby15 Před 27 dny +3

      Nothing good lasts long. IMO it is more important for us to live with dignity, regardless of Ups and Downs.

    • @yuyutubee8435
      @yuyutubee8435 Před 23 dny +1

      @@stra9761 The Plaza Accord was the beginning of the Japanese economy's problems, but the bigger issues were Japan choosing to excessively loosen credit limits and lower interest rates to combat currency overvaluation. ColdFusion did a great video on it here: czcams.com/video/lmnVP35uZFY/video.html

  • @eijiroinouye4115
    @eijiroinouye4115 Před 19 dny

    Ms Kimura speaks good english to her pupils.

  • @Timur_Alma-ata
    @Timur_Alma-ata Před 15 dny

    Pre-anime era. This is era before anime conquered Japan and the world.

    • @google_admin1
      @google_admin1 Před 10 dny

      Good entertainment always conquer the world, just like Hollywood did

  • @paulkarsonalanis1466
    @paulkarsonalanis1466 Před 19 dny

    This was before the bubble burst.

  • @jacktran7024
    @jacktran7024 Před 4 měsíci +2

    @4:29...smoking in meetings...man can't see that here in 'murica

    • @snooks5607
      @snooks5607 Před 17 dny +1

      you mean can't see it in 2020s? because people smoked everywhere in early 80s

  • @UngSenang-bs5qg
    @UngSenang-bs5qg Před 8 měsíci

    "Japan as Number One" ( +- 1970, by Vogel )

  • @jefferyd.rodriguez638
    @jefferyd.rodriguez638 Před 19 dny

    awww people in the comments are not mad about immigration

  • @Jor3_
    @Jor3_ Před 11 měsíci +7

    日本万歳。

  • @user-yf7nd6hs8w
    @user-yf7nd6hs8w Před rokem +13

    Well I would be damn! These guys knew about the virus 40 years ago and told us nothing. 😀

  • @runekit8286
    @runekit8286 Před 2 měsíci +2

    What makes japanese so advance, is it the less immigrants or the honor?

    • @More_Row
      @More_Row Před měsícem +1

      A little column A , and a little column B . Mayhaps

    • @Quantumleapwme
      @Quantumleapwme Před 23 dny

      They should stop making war in other countries so the immigration will stop, no one leaves their own country for fun!

    • @yuyutubee8435
      @yuyutubee8435 Před 23 dny +2

      Immigration usually helps the economy so long as the immigrants work and contribute; most do, generally. But Japan isn't very advanced anymore due to its extremely conservative mindset and unwillingness to change.