Merry Christmas, Mr Lawrence / 戦場のメリークリスマス (1983)
For the very first time, the National Museum of Singapore will be presenting a special selection of films which documents and recollects the experience of World War Two and its aftermath in the Pacific. Programmed by the Asian Film Archive, Witness to War: Memories and Screens will showcase 13 films that present memories of World War Two across different film genres, including several films that have never been screened in Singapore before.
Complementing the ongoing blockbuster exhibition Witness to War: Remembering 1942, the film programme continues the compelling narrative on Singapore's fall against the larger backdrop of upheaval in the Pacific region, through a captivating mode of storytelling on the silver screen. The diverse selection of films traces the historical development from the bombing of Pearl Harbour to Hiroshima in a collection of narratives from Singapore and its regional neighbours, and extending across continents to Britain, Japan and America.
Some of the films making their debut in Singapore include Spirit of the Overseas Chinese, a rare document of Singapore cinema which was recently discovered in the vaults of the China Film Archive; Devils on the Doorstep, which clinched the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival in 2000 and will be debuting its director’s cut; Momotaro, Sacred Sailors, which is the first ever Japanese animated feature film and follows the adventures of the titular character and his loyal sailors during the war; and Three Godless Years, a Tagalog favourite that touches on love lost and found during the turbulent period.
Three Godless Years (1976)
Momotaro, Sacred Sailors (1945)
Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970)
The Thin Red Line (1998)
Visitors can also look forward to blockbusters such as Tora! Tora! Tora!, an iconic war film that dramatically retells the Pearl Harbour attack from both sides of the conflict; Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence, featuring the late international icon David Bowie in his role as a prisoner-of-war and the cultural clashes at the internment camp; and The Thin Red Line, a Hollywood ensemble film by auteur Terrence Malick that gives a meditative view on the war.