Warning Shot

One death. Three versions of the crime. James H. Wakasa, a 63-year-old Japanese American bachelor, was shot to death by military police at Topaz concentration camp during World War II. Was it justifiable homicide, an accidental fatality, or second-degree murder? The press said he was trying to escape, the shooter claimed it was a warning shot, the case file suggests he was killed while walking a dog. This experimental film essay uses the “Rashomon effect” to juxtapose the conflicting accounts detailing the circumstances and cause of Wakasa’s untimely death. Part of the Queer Camp Trilogy.

Film Maker
Takemoto (Tina Takemoto), TT
Year
2016
Country
U.S.A.
Length
10
Language
English
Category
Activism + Protest, Aging, America, body, Community, Crime, Culture, Essay, Feminism, film studies, found footage, gay, Gender, Geography, history, Identity, Immigration, Law, LGBTQ, Literary/theatre, Love + Hate, media studies, Memory, Mortality, Politics + Policy, Portraits, Race + Ethnicity, Racism, Resistance, sexuality, Society, Theatre, Time + Space, Violence, Work about Women, Work by Women
Genre
docufiction, documentary, experimental, queer, short