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Autumn in Warsaw

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Autumn in Warsaw
Directed byHiroki Hayashi
Screenplay byMasatake Tamukai
Produced byTakahiro Kasagi
Starring
Music byToshiyuki Honda
Production
company
Distributed byKansai Telecasting Corporation
Release date
  • 23 December 2003 (2003-12-23)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Autumn in Warsaw (Japanese: ワルシャワの秋, Warushawa no aki; Polish: Jesień w Warszawie) is a Japanese-language drama television film written by Masatake Tamukai, directed by Hiroki Hayashi, and produced by Takahiro Kasagi. It was produced and filmed in Japan by the Kansai Telecasting Corporation. It was aired on 23 December 2003. The film was based on actual events of 1922, when the cooperation of the Polish Committee of Rescue of Children from the Far East, and the Japanese Red Cross Society led to the transportation of Polish orphans from Russian Siberia to Japan, before they could have been relocated to Poland.[1][2]

Plot

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In 1922, the Polish Committee of Rescue of Children from the Far East in agreement with the government of Japan, relocates Polish orphans from Russian Siberia to Osaka, Japan, before they could have been relocated to Poland. They were children of people banished there by the government of the Russian Empire.[1]

Cast

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Production

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The film was based on actual events of 1922, when the cooperation of the Polish Committee of Rescue of Children from the Far East, and the Japanese Red Cross Society led to the transportation of Polish orphans from Russian Siberia to Japan, before they could have been relocated to Poland. The film was written by Masatake Tamukai, directed by Hiroki Hayashi, and produced by Takahiro Kasagi. The music was done by Toshiyuki Honda. It was produced and filmed in Japan by the Kansai Telecasting Corporation. It was aired on 23 December 2003.[1][2] The movie was made for the celebration of the 45th anniversary of the Kansai Telecasting Corporation.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Jesień w Warszawie". filmpolski.pl (in Polish).
  2. ^ a b "Warushawa no aki". imdb.com.
  3. ^ "TV drama 'Autumn in Warsaw'". siberianchildren.pl. 22 May 2020.
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