Ancient Culture Inherited by Japan − Delivering the Spirit of Ancient Culture to the Future.
Ancient Culture Inherited by Japan − Delivering the Spirit of Ancient Culture to the Future.
[Starring]
Kei Nezu – Japanese Swordsmith
Akio Takai – Edo-Style Carving Craftsman
Chikako Yamagishi – Nishijin Textile Artisan
Tonbiii Shimizu Yutaka – Indigo-Dyed Marugame Fan Artisan
Taihei Tsunekawa – Tatami Craftsman
Harumitsu Takaoka – Hemp Knot Artisan
Kei Nezu – Japanese Swordsmith
Akio Takai – Edo-Style Carving Craftsman
Chikako Yamagishi – Nishijin Textile
Artisan
Tonbiii Shimizu Yutaka – Indigo-Dyed
Marugame Fan Artisan
Taihei Tsunekawa – Tatami Craftsman
Harumitsu Takaoka – Hemp Knot Artisan
[Created by]
Shinichi Sawada
Director / Editor /
Cinematographer / Producer
Shinichi Sawada
Director / Editor / Cinematographer /
Producer
[Production Company]
Amenouzume Inc.
[Film Distributor]
One’s
[In Association With]
Hinomoto Project
Hinomoto Foundation for Culture
Documentary Film
2025 / 116 min / © amenouzumefilm
Documentary depicting the lives of six Japanese craftsmen
Since ancient times, there have been those who, with the skill and spirit of skilled artisans, create things that come to life.
They are called ‘craftsmen’, who are connected to the eight million, sharpen their physical senses and perform their work with unparalleled precision.
Today, however, people on the planet have forgotten their hearts, rely solely on visible material values and continue to consume according to their desires.
Nature has become a victim of this, ‘conflicts’ and wars have not ceased, and the planet is truly dying.
On this dawn night, six ambitious traditional Japanese craftsmen have risen up.
A story of the soul is set in motion, with the craftsmen’s creations based on the theme of ‘harmony’.
In this film, the camera follows these craftsmen over a period of two and a half years as they create things that have “life” in them.
The film also shows the craftsmen as they are, living out their “mission”.
What does it mean to live?
This documentary questions the essence of ‘life’.
The objects produced by Japanese craftsmen are not mere tools.They are prayers, expressions of the soul, and records of lives passed down through time.
This documentary questions what “craftsmanship” means and what it means to “live one’s life” through the lives of six traditional craftsmen, including a swordsmith.The director spent four years following the creative journey of these craftsmen in their search for “harmony.The symbol of the film is a sword.
Since ancient times, swords have been offered to the gods not as weapons but as symbols of prayer.The story begins with a blacksmith, Mr. Nezu, who forges a sword in order to revive the sword of prayer in the modern age. The steel blade is imbued with a wish for harmony.
The craftsmen eventually come face to face with reality and conflict. Setbacks and rebirths. The human drama echoes the story of the sword, and the lives of the “thing” and the “person” begin to resonate with each other. This film is not merely a record of traditional culture, but a question to the hearts of modern people. What have we lost in exchange for convenience? And what will the skills and spirit still handed down today bequeath to the future? The challenge and determination of craftsmen spun in unprecedented visual beauty.
What their blades open up may be the future of our spirit to which we should return.
© 2025 Amenouzume Inc.