Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

The universal language of rugby - Japan

Japan

Jared James is the only foreigner in an all Japanese rugby team, Shizuoka Rugby Club. The 24-year old headed to Japan teach English in 2014. It wasn’t until a workmate suggested he should play rugby that he rediscovered the sport. Rugby has been an opportunity for Jared to find a support system and friends in Japan.

ADVERTISEMENT

Earlier in the year, a small team of kiwi filmmakers traveled to Japan to shoot a short (3-minute) documentary about Jared and his amateur rugby team. The documentary titled Union follows Jared as he searches for belonging and discovers strength amongst strangers. The story explores the power of rugby to bring people together, even when those people don’t speak the same language.

Union presents the national sport of New Zealand as more than a game. The film is about unity. It is a story from the sidelines about human connection through sport. Rugby is a tool to break down culture barriers. Diversity in rugby is celebrated. Union lays bare the essence of the game, and through Jared’s eyes we experience the improving, motivating, confidence building aspects which make rugby worth valuing. In the lead up to Rugby World Cup 2019, Union is also an inside look into the burgeoning sport in Japan. The film will showcase the universality of the game and is designed to bring Japan and New Zealand closer together.

Speaking about the project filmmaker Jericho Rock-Archer says:

“Rugby is valuable as more than just a sport, in Japan it’s being used by Kiwi’s to reconnect with their country, and to find support in a new isolating environment, that’s what this film is all about.”

“Union is a personal story of redemption by rugby – a film that reveals to us the essence of a game, which is too often concealed by scandal and stardom.”

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

G
GrahamVF 35 minutes ago
The 'one difference' between Boks and the back-to-back All Blacks

I have mentioned this before but what have you seen of the Varsity Cup Competition. 20 varsity teams competing and world rugby using the competition as a new rules testing ground. Virtually every Bok came through that system starting with Etsebeth de Allende Kitshoff through to Fassi and Moodie. I have checked carefully there is nothing even close to that bridge building comp in NZ.

SA have 500 000 registered rugby players NZ about a quarter of that. In SA , The game is rapidly overtaking soccer in popularity among the non traditional rugby following public and that is unearthing an unbelievably rich vein of talent. On the other hand NZ's South Seas pool is shrinking as the islands get more and more top level international competition and fewer head for NZ as the only means of playing pro rugby. On top of it all NZ have an unanswerable dilemma over allowing overseas based players to represent the AB's. Razors pleas fell on deaf ears and that is the main reason why NZ will probably never see its golden era again. South Africa is evolving quickly - adapting to a changing sporting world. NZ is stuck in the middle ages and until you get a progressive top management the conservative grass chair brigade will see NZ rugby slowly get swallowed up by the likes of South Africa, France and if they could get rid of their grass chair brigade - even England. So in 10 years time we won't have an itch to scratch any more than the Colin Meads' generation of Kiwis had about never winning a series in SA as SA did in NZ in 37. The NZ Herald wrote an article saying the best rugby team to leave New Zealand was the 37 Springboks. The AB's had that itch for sixty years. We won't have our itch that long 😉

115 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ England and their Chief problem England and their Chief problem
Search