"Minamata is the name of a fishing village in Japan," said the writer-director ("Peep Show," "Eva Peron," "Rusty Sat on a Hill One Dawn and Watched the Moon Go Down"), who wrote the piece with Mira-Lani Oglesby. "Chisso, a company that makes parts for plastic, dumped mercury waste into the water supply and the fishermen got sick. A high percentage of the villages depended on fish and fishing so their livelihoods dried up too. "The story of Minamata is just the departure point for the play," the writer said. "It's the ghost behind the play, the shadow over it. The piece is a meditation on beliefs, ways of thinking, how operatives in the system create a way of thinking that makes it possible to destroy life in order to improve it. There's a thesis that in order to progress you have to allow for destruction. No. You cannot buy into that way of thinking, because it's erroneous and hurtful."
Release Date: October 01, 1989
June 01, 2023
June 23, 2006
October 15, 2004
January 17, 1994
October 10, 1990
May 23, 1918
November 06, 2019
November 01, 2022
April 22, 2017
January 23, 1989
December 03, 2010
February 07, 2012
Unknown
August 19, 2009
March 13, 2025
June 19, 2024
April 02, 1963
March 03, 1962
September 10, 1993
January 01, 2013