Recalling that a former head of the Mt Fuji Weather Station has lent us a DVD of Nikkatsu’s Fuji-sanchō, we settle in for a video evening.
The opening sequence, showing a survey team struggling through a high-altitude blizzard, makes us grateful to be sitting in a warm living room.
Then the scene switches to a meeting at the finance ministry, where a meteorological agency staffer named Katsuragi (Ashida Shinsuke) is putting the case for building a radar station atop Mt Fuji to give advance warning of incoming typhoons.
Once Katsuragi has his budget allocation, Umehara (Ishihara Yujiro), an engineer from Mitsubishi Electric, and his team take on the challenge of designing and installing the radar.
Huge amounts of material have to be moved up the mountain, forcing the traditional packhorse drivers to master the art of high-altitude bulldozer driving.
Thanks to the heroic efforts of the entire cast, the radar station is completed on time.
As the grand finale, a bold pilot, straining his helicopter to its limits, flies in the dome that will house the radar. And soon the new installation successfully meets the test of a real typhoon…
It’s a ripping yarn, well told. The Sensei is impressed with the all-star cast, which even includes a few female luminaries such as Hoshi Yuriko to leaven up an otherwise all-guy gig.
And thanks to plentiful on-location filming, Japan’s top mountain is allowed to do a great job of starring as itself.
In fact, the camerawork alone would be sufficient reason to see this film. The location shots underscore the volcano’s vast size and the varied challenges of working there – the summit’s thin air, the storms and the shifting slopes of scoria. There’s even a cameo appearance by a brockenspectre.
Fuji-sanchō came out in 1970, a bare six years after the radar station was completed. Thanks to this promptitude, it feels credibly authentic. The helicopters, bulldozers and other featured hardware must be identical to the kit actually used during the building campaign.
Even so, after an hour or so of highly convincing re-enactions, we had to remind ourselves that Fuji-sanchō is just a movie. The movie, in turn, drew on a 1967 novel of the same name – whose author, Nitta Jirō, had been the actual leader of the radar station project a few years earlier. So the underlying events have been twice filtered through the prism of fiction.
In the end, it’s probably futile to try disentwining fact from fantasy. If Fuji-sanchō isn’t exactly documentary, then it shows what history should have been like. And it does that very entertainingly. It's no surprise to learn that Fuji-sanchō did well at the box office too.
So anybody who feels nostalgic for that mid-Shōwa spirit of high-altitude derring-do should not hesitate to sit down and soak up this movie, all 126 action-packed minutes of it. Especially if you happen to be snowed in for an evening or two.





















































