He has spoken at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Japan and been widely interviewed on his experience by the media in Japan and internationally. Check out some of the IMDb editors' favorites movies and shows to round out your Watchlist.Keep track of everything you watch; tell your friends. With David Morrissey, Mitsuru Kono, Yuriko, Tatsuhide Nojiri. It was a planned and co-ordinated attack. Anjelica Huston's BREAKING THE CHAIN Spotlights Crisis of Abused and Neglected AnimalsDr. The attack was carried out by members of the new religious movement AUM Shinrikyo (since 2000 called Aleph) … Ahead of the world premiere as part of Sheffield Doc/Fest’s Digital Edition in the Ghosts and Apparitions selection, the documentary Me and the Cult Leader debuted the new trailer. Directed by Jonathan Hacker. After being injured in the attack, Sakahara, who produced the 2001 Short Film Palme d’Or winning Bean Cake, directed by David Greenspan, suffered lifelong damage and post-traumatic stress disorder, and managed his recovery in a number of ways. Otherwise, I would not be able to feel that I had overcame it,” says director Atsushi Sakahara.
He is a writer and host of the podcast Sakahara has been a vocal spokesperson for the attacks and process of recovery.
VIMOOZ is the online hub for independent films + foreign film + documentary + film festivals. You must be a registered user to use the IMDb rating plugin. ZERO HOUR is a unique documentary format - a ticking clock hour of television which transports the viewer into the gripping countdown to some of the most dramatic events in recent history. In the attack members of the Aum Shinrikyo (Supreme Truth) cult carried six packages onto Tokyo subway trains and punctured the packages with umbrella tips, releasing deadly Sarin gas killing 12 persons and injuring more than 5,000. On March 20th, 1995 Atsushi Sakahara was one of over 6,000 people injured in the attack on the Tokyo metro by the Aum Shinrikyo cult, which still operates and recruits today.
A timely cinematic essay on restorative justice and finding closure after trauma, Me and the Cult Leader presents a perspective rarely considered in this divided world: earnest conversation. ZERO HOUR is a unique documentary format - a ticking clock hour of television which transports the viewer into the gripping countdown to some of the most dramatic events in recent history. Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription. Me and the Cult Leader . Use the HTML below. We love championing the little films. “I thought, I should face it as a filmmaker and share the work with the rest of the world. In his debut film, the documentary Me and the Cult Leader, Sakahara embarks on a journey with the cult’s executive, Hiroshi Araki, to record the parallel experiences of a victim and perpetrator.The two men are around the same age, grew up in the same region, and attended the same university, but their lives diverged dramatically in the late 80s as Hiroshi Araki joined the doomsday cult Aum Shinrikyo following a family illness and Atsushi Sakahara found himself a job in downtown Tokyo. Twenty-five years after the terrorist attack by Aum Shinrikyo on the Tokyo metro system, the two men find themselves on opposite sides of the largest act of domestic terrorism in Japan, trying to understand each other as they travel back to their hometowns. Check out the lineup of new movies and shows streaming on Netflix this month, including Want to share IMDb's rating on your own site? Looking for some great streaming picks? Gretchen Sorin and Ric Burns' DRIVING WHILE BLACK Documentary to Air on PBSPrince of Reggaeton - J Balvin Documentary "The Boy From Medellín" Acquired by AmazonWatch Premiere Episode of Showtime Docu-Series LOVE FRAUD for Free Ahead of Its On-Air PremiereWatch Trailer for JIMMY CARTER: ROCK & ROLL PRESIDENT, Part-Rockumentary, Part-PresidentialMichael Dweck And Gregory Kershaw’s Sundance Documentary THE TRUFFLE HUNTERS Opens In Theaters for Christmas Terror in Tokyo tells of the attack on 20 March 1995 on the Tokyo Subway using Sarin gas. In the film, director Atsushi Sakahara chronicles his intimate journey of confronting the doomsday cult behind the sarin gas attack on the Tokyo metro system on March 20th, 1995.