|  
                          
                            
                        "Quiet 
                          please.... Action!" 
                        So 
                          there I was, a prisoner of war headed back to camp after 
                          a long, hard day of forced labor. I was hot, tired, 
                          sun-burnt. The guard to my right glared -- ready to 
                          shoot me if given the slightest provocation. I avoided 
                          eye contact. Kept moving. As I walked past the Colonel, 
                          I could tell he was looking for a spy among us
 
                           
                           
                        "Cut-oh!" 
                           
                           
                        Thats 
                          Japanese for "CUT!" The director still wasnt 
                          happy. It was at least the 17th time wed done 
                          that scene. We went back to our positions. The make-up 
                          ladies applied more "dirt" make-up to our 
                          faces and "sweat" (water out of a spray bottle) 
                          on our backs. Both mixed in with the real thing.  
                           
                        I 
                          was an extra: One of 100 foreigners selected to play 
                          prisoners of war for Imamura Shoheis newest film, 
                          Kanzoh Sensei (Dr. Akagi in English). Winning the Palme 
                          d Or for Unagi or "Eel" has made him 
                          one of the worlds most prestigious filmmakers, 
                          so its quite an honor to work with him  
                          even in a role as minor as mine.  
                           
                        He 
                          had certainly worked his magic on Okayama. Stepping 
                          off the bus and onto the set was like a time warp to 
                          August 1945. Of course there were cameras, film crews 
                          and my fellow foreign extras to remind me that this 
                          was fantasy, not fact. Besides, most of us looked more 
                          like rejects from Chuck Norris Missing In Action 
                          than real POWs. With lots of long hair, goatees (all 
                          the rage among soldiers in the Pacific), and tattoos 
                          in full view, I could see most of us were going to wind 
                          up on the editing room floor.  
                         
                           
                         THE 
                          PLOT 
                           
                        Like 
                          most soldiers, we were working on a strictly "need 
                          to know" basis in terms of storyline. That made 
                          it very hard for a "serious" method actor 
                          like myself to find my "motivation." (Ill 
                          have you know that back in high school, the Naked Man 
                          was quite the THESBIAN with leading roles in Once Upon 
                          A Mattress, Damn Yankees and Wheres Harvey). Anyway, 
                          I only know the story as told to me by another extra 
                          at the shoot:  
                           
                        Its 
                          about a 60-year-old doctor living in a small coastal 
                          town in Japan. Hes known as the "Liver Doctor" 
                          because his diagnosis is always the same: "Its 
                          your liver," he tells his patients. Also in this 
                          village is a girl who "likes sex" and gets 
                          paid for it. Shes about 20. The doctor likes her 
                          and doesnt want to see her selling her body (whether 
                          she enjoys it or not!) So he gives her a job as a nurse
 
                          and then has sex with her.  
                           
                        "Thats 
                          it?" I was promised the film would be more profound, 
                          but thats all the info I could get at the time. 
                          I had no idea how World War II or myself would be factored 
                          in. I am just a lowly extra. As the day passed, more 
                          information would come to light: Japans POWs were 
                          sent -- against Geneva Convention regulations -- to 
                          work in factories, melting down metal for the war effort. 
                          The US unknowingly bombed many of these same buildings 
                          on their routine raids. The factory that Shohei chose 
                          for the film was a huge, gray, Orwellian structure. 
                          They allowed us to use the location only on the condition 
                          that we use hardhats off camera and that it remain nameless. 
                          It seems POWS did actually work and die there during 
                          the war. The fact that the Japanese government used 
                          POWs in this manner is a lesser known war secret that 
                          Shohei wanted expose.  
                         Speaking 
                          of exposure, I also heard that the final scene involves 
                          our two main characters making love in a small boat 
                          at sea, on a hot August morning. Just as they are reaching 
                          their climax, a huge black mushroom cloud magically 
                          appears on the horizon: Hiroshima.  
                         
                           
                          50 YEARS AGO
 
                           
                        During 
                          WWII my grandfather was brought over to fight the Japanese. 
                          The fact that I came here to teach them has always been 
                          hard for him to grasp. While his mission may have been 
                          to kill, I dont think he had any opportunities 
                          (at least none he told me about). He apparently served 
                          the whole time as an MP (Military Police) on a base 
                          in the Philippines. He likes to tell the story of how 
                          he was patrolling one day and out of the corner of his 
                          eye he saw a case of Budweiser somehow floating across 
                          a tall, grassy rice field. It was traveling parallel 
                          to him so when he reached the next intersection, he 
                          turned right to cut the beer off at the pass. Eventually 
                          it arrived at the road and from under it appeared a 
                          very surprised and scared Filipino boy. He was about 
                          to run when my grandfather told him to stop and with 
                          a stern look on his face patted the seat beside him. 
                          The boy got in the jeep, not knowing what would happen. 
                          My grandfather asked him where he lived. The boy pointed 
                          the way. Once they got to the boys house built 
                          on stilts, the boy jumped out of the jeep and started 
                          running for his home. My grandfather yelled to him: 
                          "Hey! You forgot your beer!" The boys 
                          mother came out to see what was going on and ended up 
                          inviting my grandfather into their house for dinner. 
                          I dont think hell ever forget sitting on 
                          the floor, eating their food and enjoying Budweiser 
                          with his newfound friends in the midst of World War 
                          II.  
                           
                        I 
                          got off on a little tangent. I was reminded of my grandfather 
                          by an old Japanese man there with us. He looked like 
                          a typical rice farmer, with this dirty white shirt, 
                          dark, knee-high pants, and conical hat, only there were 
                          no rice fields around. And this "farmer" sure 
                          knew how to wield a bayonet. At first I thought he was 
                          just some local come to watch us film  and may 
                          have been -- but then he started to make himself useful 
                          by demonstrating to a group of Japanese college guys 
                          (also extras playing Japanese soldiers), how to mount 
                          their bayonets on their rifles and thrust them into 
                          their enemies! Had he been a real Japanese soldier during 
                          WWII? Perhaps even a prison guard? I wonder if, like 
                          my grandfather, he too felt it difficult to comprehend 
                          how so many of us could be here teaching and not fighting. 
                          50 years isnt that long.  
                         
                           
                         SEND 
                          IN THE MARINES!  
                           
                        As 
                          I said, there were some real US soldiers in our midst. 
                          They were lead by a guy with a gravity defying blonde 
                          buzz-cut. His men called him "Sergeant Joe." 
                          He was a seasoned veteran when it came to G.I. life 
                          in Japan. He had mastered the ability, not necessarily 
                          to speak Japanese, but to speak a slow, Tonto/Tarzan 
                          English that local girls tend to understand. He was 
                          a non-commissioned officer with an opportunity to assert 
                          his leadership, get a speaking part in the film -- and 
                          maybe even a date with the girl in charge of casting! 
                          He was working hard for all three. I have to say, he 
                          did have some star power potential with his eagle eyes 
                          and erect hairdo.  
                           
                        As 
                          soon as we arrived, he began barking orders to us over 
                          a bull horn that hed commandeered from the wimp 
                          who was our designated leader. We were told to line 
                          up, break into smaller squads and get our prisoners 
                          uniforms (extremely tattered and stained fatigues which 
                          didnt really go well with the healthy physique 
                          and bright smile of many of the guys present). His men 
                          were conditioned to take orders and most of us non- 
                          military (anti-military?) types allowed him to lead 
                          as well, simply because the "official" guy 
                          was clueless.  
                           
                        Sgt. 
                          Joe turned out to be a fairly likable or at least entertaining 
                          guy. At one point between shots, he tried to play a 
                          trick on one of our guards (i.e. university students): 
                          He snuck up behind and grabbed him, then tried to take 
                          his rifle. "Hey Guys! I got him! Make a break for 
                          it!!!" Not quite. Joe never factored in the possibility 
                          that his seemingly scrawny opponent might know Judo. 
                          A second later, Joe was thrown over the guards own back, 
                          landing in the dirt with a hard thud. The guard struck 
                          a fierce Bruce Lee pose and then smiled.  
                           
                        As 
                          for the other Marines, I wasnt sure I wanted to 
                          get to know them. Ive always been pretty anti-military 
                          (Naked Mans a "lover" not a "fighter"), 
                          mainly because theyve preceded me to a lot of 
                          my favorite countries. I cant blame Canadian travelers 
                          for ALWAYS having their prized maple leaf in full view 
                          on their backpacks.  
                           
                        When 
                          I first came to Japan, I was real happy to know that 
                          I wouldnt be near any military bases. So I wasnt 
                          too excited when I found-out that at the end of filming 
                          that day, the thirty-five Marines would be unleashed 
                          on my 100% civilian Japanese hometown. I made sure to 
                          stay in that night so as not to be associated with the 
                          Marines or any damage they might do. All they seemed 
                          to talk about off camera on the first day was getting 
                          "shit-faced" and "laid." By Sunday, 
                          however, they were all hungover and sun-stroked and 
                          turned out to be rather amicable fellas. Whether we 
                          were real soldiers, English teachers, grad students 
                          or even pro rugby players (there were three among us), 
                          it was as if we had all bonded a little after having 
                          been "prisoners" together. But mainly I bonded 
                          with the men in my own squad: the "Kellys 
                          Heroes" of the set. We were definitely the biggest 
                          group of misfits there and also the most diverse. As 
                          for being prisoners, we REALLY didnt look the 
                          part, which may have been why we were group #9 out of 
                          ten present.  
                         
                           
                        MY 
                          TEAM: 
                           
                        The 
                          Frenchman: (Mid 20's) He was our leader because he spoke 
                          the best Japanese. He was a very likeable guy who would 
                          have actually looked like a prisoner, being pretty skinny 
                          and very pale. But he had this tremendous mane of dark 
                          Kenny G. hair that he barely concealed under a Japanese 
                          infantry hat. 
                        The 
                          Sailor: (22?) He gave up 2 days of R&R with his 
                          Japanese wife in order to get his big break in film. 
                          He serves onboard a US Navy destroyer. He described 
                          his job as having "anything and everything to do 
                          with guns: Cleaning them, repairing them, and if need 
                          be, shooting people with them." The only opportunity 
                          hes had to do the latter was when he helped evacuate 
                          American civilians out of Somalia. He said he suddenly 
                          didnt feel he was getting paid enough when he 
                          realized that real bullets were being shot at him. The 
                          poor guys salary isnt even half what I make. 
                          Originally from Alabama, he spoke English exactly like 
                          Forest Gump. He looked more like Martin Short though. 
                          In fact, he was very proud of his impression of Martin 
                          Short playing the "gay guy" in Steve Martins 
                          Father of the Bride, which he performed for us over 
                          and over again. All of us except the Tunisian (see below) 
                          found it rather annoying. Picture Martin short doing 
                          a gay Forest Gump and you get the idea. I really wonder 
                          what his Japanese wife sees in him. 
                        The 
                          Tunisian: (Early 20's) Like most North Africans, he 
                          spoke about five languages pretty well. I have no idea 
                          if there were actually any North African POWs in Japan 
                          during WWII, but ironically among those of us in Group 
                          #9, he looked the most like an authentic soldier. He 
                          was a young guy studying at Okayama University (I forget 
                          what), and was a bit on the immature side. He and the 
                          sailor got along great, wrestling around, doing impressions 
                          and talking about their favorite movies. They were both 
                          big Stallone and Van Dam fans.  
                        The 
                          Colombian: (Early 30's) Like most Latin Americans, he 
                          only spoke one language: Spanish. At times, I had to 
                          translate orders to him. He was a mild-mannered guy, 
                          recently arrived with his wife and two daughters, to 
                          study Medicine. Very swarthy. Nice guy. 
                        The 
                          2 Swiss: (Both mid to late 30's) These guys were straight 
                          out of Hogans Heroes, except in their case, the 
                          good guys had German accents. They were a Swiss Laurel 
                          & Hardy: One was extremely tall (about 6'5"), 
                          pale and bony, with a goiter, a beak nose and thick, 
                          horn-rimmed glasses that he refused to take off during 
                          the filming. He was way too anal to survive long in 
                          a real prison camp. He was a language instructor. He 
                          spent the entire two day shoot pestering his friend, 
                          Reinhart, a short, round architect, to march faster, 
                          get out of the cameras view, act sad, etc. Reinhart 
                          just shrugged and made snide comments back at him. Reinhart 
                          looked more like a bad mechanic than a POW.  
                        And 
                          then there was me. Given my scrawny build and shaved 
                          head haircut, youd think Id make a pretty 
                          good POW, but in the snapshots I received I have this 
                          big smile on my face that makes me look more like Im 
                          "Face" from the A-Team.  
                            
                          Despite being "at war," a good time was had 
                          by all. It was a beautiful and at times eerie experience 
                          to see Japanese working alongside foreigners to make 
                          this film. On camera we were enemies and it seemed quite 
                          real, but when the director yelled "cutoh!" 
                          we were right back to friendly conversation and posing 
                          together for photos. The juxtaposition was almost shocking. 
                          Everyone seemed so peaceful off camera as if they simply 
                          werent capable of the violence they were exuding 
                          when filming. Of course history shows us that they are... 
                          and so are we.  
                          
                        Also 
                          from NAKED MAN:  
                          Past NAKED MAN memoirs 
                          and more! 
                          and LEAVING GROUND ZERO 
                           
                          
                        email 
                          us with your comments. 
                         
                           
                       |