The
Soviet Union's occupation of
Karafuto is a very sensitive topic and controversial in both
Russia and
Japan due to the previous border dispute between the two countries. A 1974 movie titled
Karafuto 1945 Summer Hyosetsu no Mon (樺太1945年夏 氷雪の門) portrayed the event as an invasion by the
Red Army that claimed the lives of thousands. However, due to political pressure from the Soviet Union, the Japanese government intervened and banned the movie from being aired and sold.
Kiri no Hi caused less political uproar from Russia due to the movie's insistence as "fiction" and it did not focus on the Red Army's brutal actions but instead talked about
world peace. At the end, the granddaughter of the survivor of the Soviet offensive pointed at
Sakhalin and said, "Grandma, look, it's Sakhalin", with a big smile, instead of calling the island by its Japanese name of Karafuto, which hinted that the Japanese people were to move on from the past and go forward despite their conflict with the Russians. ==References==