Manchukuo Film Association Corporation (株式會社滿洲映畫協會) or Man'ei (滿映) was a Japanese film studio in Manchukuo during the 1930s and 1940s.
After the Soviet invasion of Manchuria, the Soviet Red Army facilitated the transfer of Man-ei's assets and equipment to the Chinese communists. This became the basis for the Chinese Communist Party's first full function film studio, the Northeastern Film Studio.
Background
Man'ei was established by the Kwantung Army in the occupied northeast part of China in 1937. Man'ei controlled the entire process of film production, as well as release and international distribution of Manchurian films. With its large-scale investment and capital, Man'ei mainly focused on producing political films, dramas, propaganda, and documentaries. Man'ei also expanded its film production across Japanese-occupied East Asia and exported these productions to Axis countries to achieve the goal of making Manchukuo a "Dream Land of Film Making". The company established relations with Japanese-controlled distribution networks and film studios. In 1939, Man'ei built a new studio in Changchun with cutting-edge equipment;[1] it also ran film schools from 1937 to 1944 which produced hundreds of alumni. The company’s size grew from employing 900 people in December 1940 to 1,800 by November 1944.[2]
History
Man'ei was established on August 14, 1937, as a national policy company (國策會社) which was a joint venture between the government of Manchukuo and the South Manchurian Railway Company. The original studios were located at a former wool goods factory, with the offices at the former Kitsurin Architectural Institute (吉林省建築設計院) in Kitsurin Province. Unlike Japan's film markets in Taiwan and Korea, Man'ei was promoted as being a Japanese-run Chinese film studio from its start. Man'ei grew out of the Southern Manchurian Railway's Photographic Division, which was initially charged with producing industrial and educational films about Manchukuo for Japanese audiences. Promotional materials from the studios boasted that Man'ei had the most state-of-the art facilities in all of Asia at that time. Negishi Kan'ichi was recruited from Nikkatsu's Tamagawa Studios to oversee feature film productions.[3]
In 1939, Nobusuke Kishi enlisted Masahiko Amakasu, head of Manchukuo's Ministry of Civil Affairs, to replace Negishi. Amakasu effectively used his status as a film industry outsider, as well as his notoriety as the murderer of Osugi Sakae and family to maintain the Man'ei's independence from the mainland Japanese film industry.[4] Amakasu was frequently critical and sometimes hostile to Japanese perceptions of Man'ei. As a result of a 1936 tour of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, Amakasu was able to see visit the studios Universum Film AG
Films and publications
At its peak, Man'ei became the largest and most technologically advanced film studio in Asia. Various features were made and released to the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.[11]
Modernization was the central theme of both educational and entertainment films. Although most of Man'ei's films were destroyed on the orders of the Japanese military, the American military managed to retrieve a number of them. They stored these documents in the National Archive and Records Administration after the Japanese surrender in 1945.
According to a 1939 survey of educated Manchurian viewers, Man'ei films were found to be dull and implausible, reflecting little knowledge of real life in Manchukuo.[12] In response, Man'ei strived to produce high-quality dramas. Educational films continued to occupy a large proportion of Man’ei's productions. Later, the company decided to utilize a new method, which combined familiar elements of life with an imperial ideology in order to reach a propagandistic goal.
Man'ei established a film magazine entitled Manshū eiga (満州映画), which was published from December 1937 to September 1940.[13] These included serialized novelizations of Man'ei films and entertainment news. Manshū eiga also published film criticism, although domestic scholars always complained about the quality of Man'ei's production.
Legacy
Man’ei is controversial in the history of Chinese cinema since its works are viewed in China as pro-Japanese propaganda.
About half of the Association's film archives were lost to the Soviets in the aftermath of World War II. In May 1995, Japan repurchased the films that were in the lost segment. Initially a Japanese company packaged the films in 30 episodes to be sold in Japan at 300,000 yen. The Chinese government lodged an official complaint about the legitimacy of the matter, since the government of the People's Republic of China claims copyright ownership of any of the former works of Manchukuo, and the films were reproduced without China's consent. Japan agreed to give some works back as compensation. Some are preserved today in China's National Film Archives, others are preserved in the Changchun Film Studio.
See also
- Cinema of China
- Cinema of Japan
Sources
References
- 87年前的今天伪满洲国实行日满经济一体化!东北爱国影人打响“银幕抗战 m.thepaper.cn, 2021-06-28, retrieved 2025-09-22^
- Yangjin Zhang. Chinese National Cinema Routledge, 2004^
- , pp.29. Michael Baskett. The Attractive Empire: Transnational Film Culture in Imperial Japan University of Hawai'i Press, 2008^