Anyone who thinks nuclear is going to be easier to site than solar, wind, or batteries, might want to give these items a look.
My position is hoping for the best, because I’m downwind of one of the big nuclear restarts happening at Palisades in West Michigan. I wish them all the luck in the world.
Having directed the haunting “Chernobyl: The Lost Tapes,” James Jones, who worked here with co-director and producer Megumi Inman, seems to know his way around disasters both natural and, in the case of Fukushima, unnatural. He has the right people to explain both what happened and was in danger of happening. Reporter Martin Fackler, who said that entering post-storm Fukushima was “like entering hell,” breaks down, step by step, what occurs inside a nuclear reactor when power is lost and the fissionable material can’t be cooled. As it happens, the disaster in the northern Japanese city has left the area uninhabitable even today, but the possibilities had approached the apocalyptic. That the worst didn’t happen does not prevent “Fukushima” from being a thriller, though it is also something short of a cautionary scientific tale: While nuclear power would seem to be the answer to climate change, pollution and resource depletion, the downside, as the film makes quite plain, is people. Although it was also an elite Tokyo firefighting team that kept a nightmare from being realized.
It would be interesting for this viewer to know, from someone more familiar with the Japanese psyche and culture, how to read the interviews with the workers who stayed at Fukushima throughout the crisis and are portrayed as heroes by the film, even as they themselves refuse to be lionized. Ikuo Izawa, an operator at the plant who provides a very personal perspective on the story, spends much of his considerable interview time with his eyes closed. It seems to be a symptom of shame, something exhibited throughout the film by other employees of Tepco, the massive Japanese utility company that ran the plant and ended up apologizing to the nation for its oversights and failures at Fukushima.
Continue reading “Trailer: HBO’s Fukushima Doc”



