[60 fps] Views of Tokyo, Japan, 1913-1915

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июл 2020
  • Source video (with ambiance sound) - please subscribe to guy jones channel, he is doing an amazing job in ambiance sound adding: • Video
    🎞 Upscaled with neural networks footage from the dawn of film taken in Tokyo, Japan from 1913-1915.
    You can reach me here:
    💌 shir-man.com
    ✔ FPS boosted to 60 frames per second, I have also fixed some playback speed issues;
    ✔ Faces are enhanced too - I have added to the pipeline of algorithms a neural network that is specially designed for facial restoration.
    ✔ Image resolution boosted up to 4k - with digital artifacts, but some parts are improved noticeably;
    ✔ Removed noise and fixed some damaged parts.
    ✔ Colorized - please, be aware that colorization colors are not real and fake, colorization was made only for the ambiance and do not represent real historical data.
    #Tokyo #Japan #Upscale #60fps
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 19 тыс.

  • @DenisShiryaev
    @DenisShiryaev  3 года назад +5170

    You can request next video for an upscale in this thread ✨

    • @chenturgeman7799
      @chenturgeman7799 3 года назад +30

      amazing

    • @VIY10000
      @VIY10000 3 года назад +34

      пусть будут какие-нить города России:)

    • @gabttv4754
      @gabttv4754 3 года назад +66

      @@chenturgeman7799 anything that has to do with titanic

    • @vasokolbaso1
      @vasokolbaso1 3 года назад +4

      Tiflis

    • @gabrielfdaher
      @gabrielfdaher 3 года назад +42

      this pls
      ruclips.net/video/xdn0n4kvq_A/видео.html

  • @ValiantPixel
    @ValiantPixel 3 года назад +15017

    Those people staring into the camera could never have predicted that I’d be laying down here on my bed over 100 years later and staring right back at them. It’s just wild.

    • @Me-nk5ic
      @Me-nk5ic 3 года назад +396

      @@sagartamang0000 They will read our comments and say stupid old guys.. lol

    • @Me-nk5ic
      @Me-nk5ic 3 года назад +127

      @@verusmember997 The brain power and kindness decreases generation after generation but beauty increases.
      Old people are actually smarter than us but we think we are more smarter than them.

    • @gregorynoeldonasco3863
      @gregorynoeldonasco3863 3 года назад +8

      420th like :)))

    • @Geert365
      @Geert365 3 года назад +27

      If only they had known, it would really have given meaning to there life i think.

    • @sephir91
      @sephir91 3 года назад +105

      If only they knew I’d be staring back at them through an iphone, while I’m taking a shit over 100 years later

  • @Damian-tk9zg
    @Damian-tk9zg 3 года назад +28539

    This is by far the closest we can get to a time traveling machine.

    • @Pro-Deo
      @Pro-Deo 3 года назад +226

      I totally agree Damian Alvarez! Could you just see if you suddenly transported back to one of the street scenes? I can, it would be like complete culture shock to me! Until I'd eat their food :)
      This film footage is very precious. I never seen anything like it and I'm 60!

    • @Pro-Deo
      @Pro-Deo 3 года назад +63

      @Czterdziestysiódmy yeah I know -everything moves.
      This film is living proof because it totally blew me away :)

    • @RawkL0bster
      @RawkL0bster 3 года назад +84

      @@gutsjoestar7450 Scientifically, with enough gravity we can at least time travel forward.

    • @shuttze
      @shuttze 3 года назад +49

      there will be a vr based on the old movies im sure at some point

    • @bangkokxpats
      @bangkokxpats 3 года назад +138

      Indeed... all those kids... all deceased by now... and the grandpas and grandmas appearing here and there on the footage... You witness someone who was REALLY born in 1830...1840's... Unbelievable! So touching!

  • @shayshawbear3865
    @shayshawbear3865 9 месяцев назад +685

    The look of curiosity on the people's faces when the see the camera, it's so fascinating and somehow nostalgic.

    • @perfectopubg7320
      @perfectopubg7320 8 месяцев назад +6

      have a nice life

    • @formdusktilldeath
      @formdusktilldeath 7 месяцев назад +3

      Little did they know... their souls were stolen!

    • @nuffflavor
      @nuffflavor 7 месяцев назад +2

      LOL.... and we humans still ham up in front of cameras to this date !!!!

    • @k00ij
      @k00ij 5 месяцев назад

      The word you're looking for is anemoia

    • @Kube_Dog
      @Kube_Dog 5 месяцев назад +4

      We've just witnessed the birth of the Japanese love affair with cameras! All those busloads of Japanese tourists carrying cameras can be traced back to this moment.

  • @user-lp5cp7gw5q
    @user-lp5cp7gw5q Год назад +252

    これ何回見ても良いな
    街並み人の服装、表情、物にワクワクする

    • @aohige
      @aohige 4 месяца назад +8

      第一印象は「背ェ低」でしたw
      そういや戦後まで日本人の平均身長ってすっごい低いかったんだよなぁ・・・

    • @lukecarroll9823
      @lukecarroll9823 2 месяца назад +4

      Maybe it was due to diet? ​@@aohige

    • @julitakamaki4386
      @julitakamaki4386 2 месяца назад +2

      @@lukecarroll9823It seems hight is increasing nearly world wide and there has also been a drop in testosterone levels. Possible correlation? Strange changes in the modern world.

    • @lukecarroll9823
      @lukecarroll9823 2 месяца назад +3

      @@julitakamaki4386 drop in testosterone is probably due to the fact most jobs are more sedentary. We spend more time on couch or at a desk... And also some pollution of air, food and water.

    • @box-yarou
      @box-yarou 4 дня назад

      ​@@lukecarroll9823フェミニズムの影響も多少あるんじゃないかな、変な女が増えすぎて男があまり異性を求めなくなったとか

  • @lalakuma9
    @lalakuma9 3 года назад +5864

    I feel like I time-traveled and everyone's staring at me.

    • @angelsantana7739
      @angelsantana7739 3 года назад +26

      Así es amiga

    • @mmmmallqui2176
      @mmmmallqui2176 3 года назад +5

      Nice.

    • @givencci9997
      @givencci9997 3 года назад +13

      Yea u r so unique n different go n get a frappe from starbucks

    • @chimedemon
      @chimedemon 3 года назад +33

      Miguel Lozano dude come on.

    • @hanynasr1326
      @hanynasr1326 3 года назад +1

      NiD0 Ravensbeard what’s wrong with frappes?

  • @akshaytyagi7998
    @akshaytyagi7998 3 года назад +3460

    Public: This video is for what?
    Cameraman: RUclips content.

  • @dger3325
    @dger3325 Год назад +55

    子供って変わらないんだな
    現代も昔も皆好奇心旺盛で楽しそうに今を生きてる
    このまま100年200年とずっと続けば良いなぁ

  • @kuma4593
    @kuma4593 Год назад +649

    十数年前に逝去した祖父が、まだ1歳の時の映像ですが、ものすごく画像と音声が鮮明なのが、本当に驚きです。
    活気のある浅草の風景に感動です。

    • @gamova1009
      @gamova1009 Год назад +104

      音は当時の音じゃないですよ。雰囲気を出すために入れている効果音です。
      当時は映像を収めることは出来ましたが、音まで入れる技術はまだありません。

    • @myoukou-ikunofu
      @myoukou-ikunofu Год назад +12

      @@gamova1009 へぇ 映像のが音より先なんですね
      そう言えばトーキーってありましたね 
      なんか音のが簡単そうに思えますが不思議です

    • @gamova1009
      @gamova1009 Год назад +50

      @@myoukou-ikunofu
      音のが後、という意味ではなく
      映像と音の共存が当時できないという意味です。録音の技術は映像よりも前からありますが、映像と音が同時に共存できる技術がなかったということです。

    • @myoukou-ikunofu
      @myoukou-ikunofu Год назад +7

      @@gamova1009 そうでしたね
      エジソンが針咥えて蓄音機作ったんでしたかね
      すみません

    • @jim8981
      @jim8981 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@gamova1009
      そうですね。だから映像と音を分けて同時に流す手法の映画も作られていたそうですね。
      チャップリンがかなり初期にそういう映画を撮っていました。
      ちなみにこの動画の音声は明らかに現代録音されたものです。

  • @yonebayashi2212
    @yonebayashi2212 3 года назад +2129

    When this was taken. Kane Tanaka (the oldest living person today was 10 years old )

    • @palind9884
      @palind9884 3 года назад +125

      one of the kids might be her!

    • @iwatchhentaieverydaywithsenpai
      @iwatchhentaieverydaywithsenpai 3 года назад +28

      Bruh

    • @aliqadiri6936
      @aliqadiri6936 3 года назад +194

      Isn't it crazy how much she's lived through? she experienced THIS era. and she's still with us

    • @Daniel-ld7xs
      @Daniel-ld7xs 3 года назад +104

      @@aliqadiri6936 she's seen how the world's gone to shit

    • @WraithLK
      @WraithLK 3 года назад +22

      kana you’re*

  • @heavyhitters3594
    @heavyhitters3594 3 года назад +7497

    I’m Japanese and can’t believe this was “only” 100 years ago...and feeling so weird that my 101years old grand mother lived in this era.

    • @duvalonepiece9496
      @duvalonepiece9496 3 года назад +1075

      hey try to show your grandmother this, maybe can make her happy

    • @Lucky-qh1do
      @Lucky-qh1do 3 года назад +291

      101 wow 💞

    • @Wassenhoven420
      @Wassenhoven420 3 года назад +472

      Show her the vid! and give her a hug! Wish my grandmother was still around :)

    • @pu3798
      @pu3798 3 года назад +178

      100歳越えはすごい

    • @DangeHD
      @DangeHD 3 года назад +350

      And if you go back another 60 years you have a isolated Japan without any trade with western countrys except from the Netherlands. 200 years of Peace since the Civil war until the Americans forced them to trade with a gun pointed at their heads. Since ww2 a lot of culture is forgotten and/or lost due to Americans wanting to make Japan a western country.
      To be clear i just don't like the American Government forcing people to live like they want them to through violence and war which they do even today. Back in the 19th century every European country did that, but kinda grew Out of it (except Britain).

  • @kou5048ify
    @kou5048ify Год назад +110

    撮影した方 凄いですね。貴重なフィルム見れて嬉しいです。

  • @user-km9yk4sc5j
    @user-km9yk4sc5j Год назад +115

    たしかに...撮ったのもすごいけどそれが現在でも見れることがすごい...保存環境とか..めっちゃ丁寧に扱ってたんだろうか...
    たった100年前なのにファンタジーだ...

  • @kesayo
    @kesayo 2 года назад +7257

    The oldest living Japanese person was 10 years old at this time. Amazing to think that someone still alive today remembers seeing all of that live.

    • @alicomando1195
      @alicomando1195 2 года назад +49

      Salam
      Are you One of those Guys?

    • @kenlompart9905
      @kenlompart9905 2 года назад +300

      There's a Japanese person who is 116 years old?

    • @zapurpdrank
      @zapurpdrank 2 года назад +59

      are you trippin

    • @DannyBridie
      @DannyBridie 2 года назад +48

      @@zapurpdrank 10 years old lmaoooo

    • @Soum.i
      @Soum.i 2 года назад +551

      @@kenlompart9905 Yes, they are actually 118 now. They were born in 1903. Though, that being said, she was born in Fukuoka, so it's highly unlikely she saw Tokyo at this point.

  • @jinkazama496
    @jinkazama496 3 года назад +886

    Fun fact: the oldest person alive now is Kane Tanaka (born 1903). He was 10-12 years old when this footage was taken.

    • @laobok
      @laobok 3 года назад +77

      *She

    • @Hobiemyhubby
      @Hobiemyhubby 3 года назад +60

      All I could think about how everyone in this vid is probably dead if that's the case 🙂

    • @augurseer
      @augurseer 3 года назад +57

      Our time here is limited. May we all make the best of it.

    • @petrusman0
      @petrusman0 3 года назад +7

      @Kaen that's the question, isn't it?

    • @giuliab8484
      @giuliab8484 3 года назад +3

      michael Lol good answer

  • @lion-sai
    @lion-sai 9 месяцев назад +73

    100年以上前戦前の日本はこんな感じだったのか😮とても貴重な映像ありがとうございます!

  • @skypeashooter
    @skypeashooter Год назад +43

    誰が撮ってくれたかわからないが感謝。貴重な映像

  • @esteban_666
    @esteban_666 3 года назад +1145

    0:54 The little boy waving at the camera is ahead of his time.

    • @Hobiemyhubby
      @Hobiemyhubby 3 года назад +126

      Ikr, very clever boy. Must've figured out that other people would see him and it'll be nice to say hi

    • @cesar_8336
      @cesar_8336 3 года назад +32

      He's now showing this and saying to his grand-grandchildren, do you see that boy? It's me!

    • @ebanydwayne4941
      @ebanydwayne4941 3 года назад +40

      @@cesar_8336 Let us hope he didnt died in battle in WW2

    • @Deeznutsmynamejeff21
      @Deeznutsmynamejeff21 3 года назад +17

      Imagine telling him that strangers on the internet a hundred years later would be talking about him

    • @yosafatsurya1082
      @yosafatsurya1082 3 года назад +14

      He is time traveler🤣🤣🤣

  • @InstantMilktea
    @InstantMilktea 3 года назад +914

    0:54 that boy over there waving his arms is a genius. He waving to the camera hes ahead of his time

  • @DanielBiggins17
    @DanielBiggins17 6 месяцев назад +94

    As someone who looks highly upon Japanese culture, seeing Senso-Ji temple, a place I visited in 2014, back almost exactly 100 years made me tear up. Truly a landmark of history and beauty.

  • @nishi189
    @nishi189 9 месяцев назад +27

    貴重な資料を公開して頂き、ありがとうございます
    目の光やはにかみを見るとやはり間違いなく同族の哀愁を覚え考えさせられます

  • @kamudototsuka
    @kamudototsuka 3 года назад +3609

    This is a video from the time period when my grandmother was born .....
    Looking at the video, it appears to have been filmed in the Asakusa area.
    0:16The ”風鈴(Furin)”is a traditional Japanese tool that makes a cool sound when the wind blows to relieve hot feelings.
    I have one hanging in the window at my house.
    "風" is "Wind.
    Does "鈴" mean something like "bell, chime"?
    This guy seems to carry a cart and sell it.
    It looks hard.
    2:00This is the Asakusa Sixth Ward in the entertainment district.
    There were a lot of popular theaters in Asakusa and the vestiges of them still remain.
    2:16  Since it says "十二階(Twelfth Floor)", I think it is the 12-story building "凌雲閣(Ryounkaku)", which was a famous place at that time.
    The name "凌雲閣(Ryounkaku)" means "雲を凌ぐ(surpassing the clouds)".In Japan.
    where there were no tall buildings at the time, the 12-story building was an innovation that made it a popular tourist attraction.
    Japan's first electric-powered elevator was also adopted.
    However, that elevator was not used very often due to many problems.
    To entertain customers climbing the long staircase, pictures of beauty pageants were displayed on the staircase and voted on at the top floor.
    It's a huge difference compared to the images from the US at the same time.
    It was destroyed by a big earthquake.
    In the big earthquake, the 8th floor and above snapped off, and about 13 spectators fell to their deaths along with the debris.
    However, one person was lucky enough to be caught by a signboard of a Japanese tabi socks brand called FUKUSUKE during the fall and survived.
    Fukusuke Tabi is still a famous stocking and innerwear manufacturer in Japan.
    2:31Among the posters for various plays and movies, this one turned out to be the only one I could find.
    It is a silent film called "曽我兄弟狩場の曙(Akebono of the Soga Brothers Hunting Ground)" made by M. Pathe Company.
    This company merged with three other companies after a year of moving pictures to become Nikkatsu, a movie company that still exists today.
    Nikkatsu has largely declined recently, but it seems that they are still producing films and is famous for supporting the Japanese film industry.
    It says "Park Theatre" and has a slightly different title, or maybe it's a play about it.
    Although the staff is known, the original film does not exist and it is a lost film that cannot be seen now.
    I don't usually know that such a thing has ever happened, even to Japanese people.
    When I looked it up, I got a little excited.
    The way the kanji are written is so old-fashioned it's hard to read!
    2:45 The product called "仁丹(jintan)" on the right pillar is still sold in Japan.
    It was like a refreshment that was labeled as a medicine, and it was advertised on a large scale to take advantage of the popularity of Ryounkaku at the time.
    2:55 文房具雑貨(stationery・miscellaneous goods) マント(Cloak) ショール(shawl) タバコ(tobacco)
    Even a hundred years ago, the text hasn't changed that much.
    I'm surprised myself.
    3:10  This is Nakamise street in Asakusa.
     I think it was taken before the big earthquake.
    The video era was a time when democracy was popular, the country was relatively peaceful, and East and West were blended together.
    The Japanese call it "Taisho Roman" and use it as a major source of material for comics and dramas.
    3:17 The Kaminarimon lantern is famous in Asakusa, but actually there are four large lanterns in Sensoji Temple, including the Kaminarimon.
    This is one of them, the "小舟町(Kofunachou)" lantern between the ”雷門(Kaminarimon)" lantern at the entrance and the "志ん橋(Shinbashi)” lantern in the main hall.
    I found this out later.
    It was also the year that Yoshinobu, the last shogun of the Edo Shogunate, died.
    He was a shogun who used his natural intelligence to navigate through a period of upheaval that was too turbulent for him to manage alone.
    In addition to becoming a master of the shuriken, he also loved photography, oil painting, bicycles, and other Western interests.

    • @chatlydeguit4873
      @chatlydeguit4873 3 года назад +146

      Wow thankss

    • @shereenj3018
      @shereenj3018 3 года назад +130

      So cool, thanks for the insight!

    • @OshoML
      @OshoML 3 года назад +78

      Thanks for the info.

    • @opus53waldstein70
      @opus53waldstein70 3 года назад +153

      You should document what you wrote here in an article of a journal or somewhere else for future generations !
      thank you for sharing :)

    • @sv7017
      @sv7017 3 года назад +45

      Thanks. This is amazing

  • @vincentnguyen777
    @vincentnguyen777 3 года назад +2138

    Cameraman: okay everyone, just pretend I’m not here and don’t stare into the camera

    • @chipbug
      @chipbug 3 года назад +128

      Most of the people on the film probably did not even know what they got into and their images would be still being seen 100 years later.

    • @pauvalentinaa
      @pauvalentinaa 3 года назад +110

      they were like 👁👄👁

    • @Tsumami__
      @Tsumami__ 3 года назад +36

      I think a lot of the time people either assumed they were cameras taking still photographs or they had just never seen a camera before.

    • @Peichen01
      @Peichen01 3 года назад +39

      The cameraman is probably a white guy that was there to record footage for back home and if you have been a tourist to places that's not used to tourism, you'd know the feeling. We used to stare at "white guy" when I was little and after I started traveling to unusual places people begin to stare at me

    • @gagamanyo
      @gagamanyo 3 года назад +7

      TBH, i don't think they knew what that was. They was like: What dafug is that White ass doin' with that damn thing

  • @gamasuke69
    @gamasuke69 Год назад +33

    この時代に自分のご先祖がいると思うとなんだか感動しちゃうよ。

  • @user-jz6ou5rn3h
    @user-jz6ou5rn3h Год назад +46

    大正ロマンの日本が美しい映像で観れるなんて感激です!

  • @raufahmad6970
    @raufahmad6970 3 года назад +2520

    This video quality is better than the modern security cameras today.

    • @IsntTheInternetGreat
      @IsntTheInternetGreat 3 года назад +124

      You're so right. In this video you can see every detail.
      Modern security cameras: 'Ah! That vague grey pixelated blob did the robbery! Find a vague grey pixelated blob and arrest him!'

    • @jakobfredin4909
      @jakobfredin4909 3 года назад +103

      Not trying to be rude but you're aware that this isn't the original footage right? These films have been enhanced with the help of neural networks trained to improve vintage video quality and the fps, colorization and sound ambience have all been added manually.

    • @hky0202
      @hky0202 3 года назад +17

      Maybe they have used the AI tech to upscale resolution and use several algorithms to improve the quality of the video.

    • @paxeey
      @paxeey 3 года назад +51

      And also most security cameras have not so good quality for a reason, they record 24/7 so having high quality footage would take up a lot of space.

    • @allencraig02
      @allencraig02 3 года назад +19

      The lenses for security cameras are 3cm. They sacrifice quality for size. Those old video cameras were huge, and with good quality lenses.

  • @Kirou_02
    @Kirou_02 2 года назад +4090

    I'm so impressed by this. This was like "only" 100 years ago. Look at Japan now, it looks so far apart from 100 years ago to now.

    • @nanamacapagal8342
      @nanamacapagal8342 2 года назад +283

      100 is a lot when you compare it from day, but at the same time 100 years is only a small part of history.

    • @NosyFella
      @NosyFella 2 года назад +70

      @@RainFox it will look like this video

    • @derbeisser8777
      @derbeisser8777 2 года назад +82

      Our descendants will no longer identify with the ethnic peoples of europe.
      That's the difference to japan.

    • @GlitchPredator
      @GlitchPredator 2 года назад +45

      @@derbeisser8777 What are you hinting at?

    • @ReMeDy_TV
      @ReMeDy_TV 2 года назад

      @@GlitchPredator He's implying cultural identities will be discarded in favor of appeasing socialist Democrats with open border policies. There ya go.

  • @hy31legalmusic
    @hy31legalmusic 11 месяцев назад +81

    「いらっしゃいませー」など、今でも飛び交う言葉がこの時代にもあったことがなんとなく感動。

    • @user-lc8yh8rf6n
      @user-lc8yh8rf6n 10 месяцев назад +11

      現代の音をかぶせてるだけやないか😂
      お前ら、長生きせえよ!🤣

    • @kylie373
      @kylie373 10 месяцев назад +11

      音は後付けです

    • @hy31legalmusic
      @hy31legalmusic 10 месяцев назад +13

      @@user-lc8yh8rf6n いやん恥ずかしい😇長生きします

    • @hy31legalmusic
      @hy31legalmusic 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@kylie373 まるっきり信じちゃいました!

  • @user-bl4lq8ee3d
    @user-bl4lq8ee3d 10 месяцев назад +92

    人々や景色に、質素ながらも清潔感と品位が感じられます。

  • @Manbarrican
    @Manbarrican 3 года назад +3270

    It's crazy how that was just 100 years ago, it was an entirely different world.

    • @sesaarinen
      @sesaarinen 3 года назад +83

      Well, not entirely. People don't change.

    • @impaladba
      @impaladba 3 года назад +26

      @@sesaarinen people do not need to change anymore. Because technology is doing this job now.

    • @eduardelric
      @eduardelric 3 года назад +41

      @thors blot WW3 paints a different picture..

    • @avaolivia6839
      @avaolivia6839 3 года назад +40

      And now we get in new world too.
      2020 covid 19. The new era star here.

    • @user-tt8yt3co1z
      @user-tt8yt3co1z 3 года назад +10

      The country that has killed the most people in the world.

  • @wewd
    @wewd 3 года назад +654

    The craziest thing about this old film is that there are people in Japan alive today who are old enough to remember when it was like this. Some of them could theoretically (but not likely) even be in this video! The oldest person in Japan is a woman who is 117 years old and was born in 1903. There are younger children than her in this video.

    • @MrJH101
      @MrJH101 3 года назад +41

      Yes, it’s amazing how fast technology advances. Makes one wonder what our world will look like when we’re all over 100 years-old as well and we’re the only ones to remember what the early 21st century was like.

    • @kevinmiller9760
      @kevinmiller9760 3 года назад +14

      Is this the same period as the anime Demon Slayer ?

    • @Veranze
      @Veranze 3 года назад +26

      @@kevinmiller9760 Yep! It was set in the Taishō era, sometime between 1912 and 1926. Which means it's in the same period as this video.

    • @LogiForce86
      @LogiForce86 3 года назад +1

      @@MrJH101 Worse then the last decades of the 20th century, I know that already. lol

    • @hartleyfarah
      @hartleyfarah 3 года назад +2

      @@MrJH101They would have so much footage to look at, they'll be like. What are those devices in their hands! Everyone has one! Hahaha

  • @yoshidababies4222
    @yoshidababies4222 9 месяцев назад +106

    I was literally in Asakusa two days ago, then to see it alive over a hundred years ago at 3:20 is incredible!

    • @dougules
      @dougules 7 месяцев назад +9

      It’s one of the few things in this video that are still immediately recognizable as the same.

  • @user-bt8ni4yt2t
    @user-bt8ni4yt2t Год назад +112

    なんか・・・今の日本よりも心豊かで楽しそうだなぁ。と感じてしまった。

    • @alexsky-ved
      @alexsky-ved Месяц назад

      3:50 - это добрые душевные лица 🌝🌝🌝

  • @abdielmoreno-cruz354
    @abdielmoreno-cruz354 2 года назад +1893

    I love how footage from this point in time usually has people looking right into the camera because camera’s was such advanced tech back then. Reminds me of the WWI film “They shall not grow old” how everyone is just fascinated by the camera

    • @OFFCODEV2
      @OFFCODEV2 Год назад +3

      Duhhh

    • @secretname3897
      @secretname3897 Год назад +24

      I was thinking the same thing! It honestly helps me see through their eyes a little more.
      It reminds me that they see someone there. It reminds me that cameras were t always so readily available. I mean hell, I grew up AS cell phones were developing and still forget that there was a time when no one I knew even had a computer.
      But I watch footage like this and see how curious they are about a camera and it's like I'm there with them, just as curious.

    • @wetstinkysocks2950
      @wetstinkysocks2950 Год назад

      I wonder if they had more than one gender back than and preferred pronouns 🤔

    • @icydsting6037
      @icydsting6037 Год назад

      @@wetstinkysocks2950 Japan don't care for the western pc/woke stuff today so I doubt it. lol

    • @davidrenton
      @davidrenton Год назад +11

      @@wetstinkysocks2950 i hope they did , as it would be quite to reproduce with just the 1 :)

  • @jason41a
    @jason41a 3 года назад +2670

    early 1900s japan: full of children
    2000s japan: full of old people.

    • @bruh4316
      @bruh4316 3 года назад +18

      Fr

    • @snoochpounder
      @snoochpounder 3 года назад +208

      Considering how old Japanese people often turn probably a lot of the same people.

    • @UP3UP
      @UP3UP 3 года назад +59

      It is not unique to Japan.

    • @ACOMX-jl4zf
      @ACOMX-jl4zf 3 года назад +198

      @@snoochpounder many of those kids probably die during ww2

    • @bannyu3105
      @bannyu3105 3 года назад +104

      1900 no condoms

  • @user-lk2xt4gz3t
    @user-lk2xt4gz3t Год назад +96

    あの当時はカメラが珍しく
    不思議そうに眺める人達が多い
    ように思いますが、屈託のない
    子供の表情には癒やされるし、
    浅草寺があんなに賑わっていた
    とは、想像すらしてなかったので
    時代の移り変わりを感じますね。

  • @luckyman7508
    @luckyman7508 7 месяцев назад +61

    着物ってやっぱり格好良いな……
    かつての日本人のように私も着物を普段着で着てみたい

    • @user-hn1rh9ki6f
      @user-hn1rh9ki6f Месяц назад

      あんなめんどくさいのやめといた方がいいよせめて袴にしな

  • @vinadevs8974
    @vinadevs8974 3 года назад +979

    Japaneses at those time look very currious when they saw a camera and now they have best camera brands.

    • @TwistedSoul2002
      @TwistedSoul2002 3 года назад +104

      Yeh- they probably saw that original footage and thought, “we can do better!”.

    • @bidensy4219
      @bidensy4219 3 года назад +17

      Nikon canon

    • @rvind000
      @rvind000 3 года назад +14

      @@bidensy4219 Sony

    • @espreedupree
      @espreedupree 3 года назад +4

      Fujifilm

    • @vinadevs8974
      @vinadevs8974 3 года назад +3

      @@espreedupree Olympus

  • @neko7345
    @neko7345 3 года назад +180

    豊かな時代だったんだなと感じました。
    着物にマント、和服はカッコいいですね。
    タバコやマントといった縦に書かれた
    ノボリも素敵。
    日本文化を誇りに思います!

  • @Narokkurai
    @Narokkurai Год назад +145

    I've been reading a lot of Natsume Sōseki lately. This video is so useful for helping me really visualize and understand the world he lived in and wrote about.

  • @user-ly1fy3vy7c
    @user-ly1fy3vy7c 5 месяцев назад +8

    ところどころいらっしゃいませ~って聞こえるのが凄くいい。

  • @user-rd4oo8rs8prkms
    @user-rd4oo8rs8prkms Год назад +1558

    人々の視線から、当時のカメラが遠くからでも確認できる大きさで、極めて珍しいものだったことがよくわかる。

    • @_.........................._
      @_.........................._ Год назад +68

      今みたいに添加物とかも少ないから、みんな健康的で肌きいそうだなぁ

    • @user-vz6rs9ej9p
      @user-vz6rs9ej9p Год назад +95

      なんつーか、はるか昔の江戸時代にも見えて、今時のそこら辺の田舎の近所らへんにも見える感じ?
      あと文字が読めるし分かること。
      これらに趣を感じた。
      文字が読めるし、溶け込めそうなそこら辺の風景だから、タイムスリップして飛ばされてもワンチャン生きていそうな感じがした。

    • @user-in6uq7yf7r
      @user-in6uq7yf7r Год назад +42

      @@user-vz6rs9ej9p なんなら当時の東京は現代の田舎より便利そう、、、

    • @SR-by8yx
      @SR-by8yx Год назад

      @@user-in6uq7yf7r 田舎舐めすぎ

    • @Gustavo-bm3ew
      @Gustavo-bm3ew Год назад +16

      Era como ver una maquina traida de otro planeta.

  • @PeterMasalski93
    @PeterMasalski93 3 года назад +747

    I can't believe that guy carries his shop on his back...

    • @miromadiam9290
      @miromadiam9290 3 года назад +34

      Secretly a Ninja by Night 😂

    • @mrdaudouchiha47
      @mrdaudouchiha47 3 года назад +76

      That still happen in Indonesia, it called 5 foot

    • @FianRCHS
      @FianRCHS 3 года назад +11

      Come to indonesia bro, a lot people can do that

    • @BY-sh6gt
      @BY-sh6gt 3 года назад +33

      It's common in Asia back then, and in the Asian 3rd world country right now it's still pretty common

    • @liberator48
      @liberator48 3 года назад +30

      Talk about shoplifting...

  • @sakuo-ch
    @sakuo-ch Год назад +3

    アップロードしてくれて、ありがとうございます。
    とても貴重で興味ある動画が見れました。

  • @user-os8zr1sm4t
    @user-os8zr1sm4t Год назад +14

    3:40 に女性が「いらっしゃいませ」
    って言うのが現代の接客と全く同じ言い方してますね

    • @katanafish0627
      @katanafish0627 3 месяца назад

      音声は現代のやつですよ

  • @fabioo.8567
    @fabioo.8567 3 года назад +1341

    Nintendo was there allready but their business were hand-painted playing cards... how crazy is that?

    • @catnip3141
      @catnip3141 3 года назад +120

      There are 2051 companies in the world that are centuries old (data: Bank of Korea). Out of them, 65% (1345) are in Japan, about 20% in Europe, 12% in North America, several (0.2-0.3%) in China and zero in Korea. It tells a lot about Japanese mindset.

    • @ArcDevErik
      @ArcDevErik 3 года назад +14

      @@catnip3141 ...and about how old some countries are.

    • @catnip3141
      @catnip3141 3 года назад +33

      @@ArcDevErik If you talk about a millennium, America leaves the chat. But China and Korea are much older than Japan.

    • @georger64
      @georger64 3 года назад +58

      Unlike other countries, Japan embraced the industrial revolution quite early, and started opening up its market. That‘s why many of their big brand names are so old.

    • @Blankenboom77
      @Blankenboom77 3 года назад +23

      catnip3141 A lot of it has to do with the ingrained desire to bring honor to ones name in Japanese society. It is a lot more easier and common in western nations to not give a fuck about your family and many have no qualms with disgracing it.

  • @fightingneat
    @fightingneat 3 года назад +191

    子供が沢山いる、建物が立派
    何よりこんなに綺麗な映像が残っていることに驚き

    • @KimJongun000
      @KimJongun000 3 года назад +15

      今では子どもは減って老人と支払う税金は増えたな……

    • @Robin-ns8mu
      @Robin-ns8mu 3 года назад +5

      デジタル修復って技術で直したものですから

    • @fightingneat
      @fightingneat 3 года назад +3

      Robin へぇ!その技術もすごいですね
      昔の景色がよく分かっていいですね
      教えて頂きありがとうございます

    • @YOUTUNE52
      @YOUTUNE52 3 года назад +4

      着物見慣れていないから、みんな金持ちに見える

  • @user-bv9ix6yy6o
    @user-bv9ix6yy6o 6 месяцев назад +13

    2:12 Asakusa Junikai Ryounkaku. This brick and wooden building was the first in Japan to have an elevator installed. It was destroyed by the Great Kanto Earthquake on September 1, 1923, about 10 years after this video was taken. This cityscape was also reduced to ashes by fire caused by the earthquake, and is a very valuable video that cannot be seen today.

  • @user-ir1nl7wf3q
    @user-ir1nl7wf3q Год назад +10

    当たり前なんだけど、皆生きてたんだなぁ
    動画で見ると感慨深い

  • @Linkzcap
    @Linkzcap 3 года назад +1293

    The way they stare at the camera reminds me of the way people stare at the Google maps car in street view

    • @Beastiie7
      @Beastiie7 3 года назад +1

      yran

    • @crowbarska
      @crowbarska 3 года назад +50

      I wonder if there's a kind of naivety to it as well. Back then, no one appears to get camera shy. They just stare at the camera in bewilderment or intrigue.
      Maybe that's because no one had ever seen themselves played back on film...? No one had developed that self-consciousness that comes from seeing footage of yourself, so no one seems to care how gormless they look staring into a camera like we do now. 😂 And so no one tries to put on a show of any kind.
      (And of course you see this on old footage from all cultures, not just Japan.)

    • @YambamYambam2
      @YambamYambam2 3 года назад

      interesting comparison! :)

    • @JoshuaPaulHollenbeck
      @JoshuaPaulHollenbeck 3 года назад +5

      people actually stare at the Google maps cars in wonderment? i doubt that , i stare in anger briefly at them .

    • @JoshuaPaulHollenbeck
      @JoshuaPaulHollenbeck 3 года назад +2

      @@crowbarska Most Japanese back then especially are very very poor, they had no idea what was going on unless someone told them while they were filming.

  • @user-ve3gc4tp6p
    @user-ve3gc4tp6p 3 года назад +184

    す、すげぇ……。
    ここにいるほとんどの方々は既に一生を終えていると考えると…
    すげぇなぁ。

  • @federicosecondo7062
    @federicosecondo7062 Год назад +4

    Bellissimo! Grazie per la condivisione.

  • @ufhfihweiiu
    @ufhfihweiiu Месяц назад +4

    良い世の中になったもんだ。こんな貴重なものが無料で見れるんだもんな。最近地上波のテレビ全く見なくなった。

  • @healthgod5743
    @healthgod5743 3 года назад +272

    現在世界歳長寿の
    田中カ子さんがこの時
    10歳~12歳で子供だという事実を知ると感動してしまう。ここにいる大人は当然もうこの世に生きていない。

    • @s4vi152
      @s4vi152 3 года назад +3

      Please tell me what did u say

    • @user-wo5vq1bf4u
      @user-wo5vq1bf4u 3 года назад +8

      @@s4vi152 I am impressed that Kane Tanaka, the oldest person in the world, was about 10 years old at this time.
      Of course, the adults here are no longer living in this world

    • @s4vi152
      @s4vi152 3 года назад +4

      @まちるだ thank u so much

    • @google_admin1
      @google_admin1 3 года назад +9

      So that means there is some possibility that those who were under 10 years old in this video still alive. Sugosugite Kusa.

    • @Mikasaxx0
      @Mikasaxx0 3 года назад

      @@google_admin1 Those fetus and small kids must be around 97 to 100+ years old if they're still alive.

  • @Ocelopillitl
    @Ocelopillitl 3 года назад +421

    The grandpa with his grandchildren at the beggining maked me cry, wholesome.

    • @nico5173
      @nico5173 3 года назад +1

      Yahir Mijangos why ??

    • @kevinly9491
      @kevinly9491 3 года назад

      @Nicolas Nicolas because

    • @xDrunkMarshall
      @xDrunkMarshall 3 года назад +2

      @@nico5173 Because of maked

    • @chissoku69
      @chissoku69 3 года назад +1

      maked deez nutz

    • @xMMMLK
      @xMMMLK 3 года назад

      yes why did it make you cry?

  • @user-vn7nq9zs3l
    @user-vn7nq9zs3l 3 месяца назад +5

    撮った場所にもよるのでしょうが、とにかく子供が多いですね。活気というかパワーを感じます

  • @user-rm5ed7nh6o
    @user-rm5ed7nh6o Год назад +6

    こんな貴重な歴史的資料をスマホで見れる時代に感謝。

  • @michaljakistam136
    @michaljakistam136 3 года назад +879

    I love when they look at the camara with such amazement on their faces. I feel like they're watching me through a window. What a crazy feeling!

    • @MrVikingdane
      @MrVikingdane 3 года назад +26

      They are they just don’t know it in their time ;)

    • @cut--
      @cut-- 3 года назад +10

      i JUST wrote something like that - before I read the posts ! Glad someone else has the same feelings.

    • @bany512
      @bany512 3 года назад +2

      i think you are just overthinking it. or what, a inter-dimensional time/space window is what you mean ?

    • @michaljakistam136
      @michaljakistam136 3 года назад +27

      @@bany512 It's just the feeling bro. Don't take it literally.

    • @cut--
      @cut-- 3 года назад +3

      @@bany512 no one said anythinng like "inter-dimensional" that I saw.. Inter cultural maybe?

  • @amilie0202
    @amilie0202 3 года назад +386

    Love how little kids staring at camera with their curious faces... sad to think they must have been sent out to war when they got older.

    • @grimreaper9477
      @grimreaper9477 3 года назад +52

      Or that kids exactly like those were nuked by America and have been disfigured for life or killed.

    • @Manxkaffee
      @Manxkaffee 3 года назад +21

      I like to think they were too young for conscription in WW1 and to old for WW2. Probably not though.

    • @SweetlySerene
      @SweetlySerene 3 года назад +37

      Manxkaffee youre absolutely right. WW1 was actually already waging at this time (1914-1918) so these kids were too young. WW2 was 1939-1945, so even the babies in this video would be in their early 30’s-40’s, so unless already in the military it’d be a lower chance of conscription. Amazing how quickly time passes yet these kids lived (hopefully) through the biggest points of the 20th century

    • @trainv7612
      @trainv7612 3 года назад +10

      It's more likely they were caught in the fire bombing of civilian centers by America

    • @chipbug
      @chipbug 3 года назад +26

      @@SweetlySerene While WW2 officially started in 1939, Japan had been waging wars with its neighbours, e.g. Russia, China and Korea, long before that.

  • @rococo9342
    @rococo9342 Год назад +41

    この映像に映っている方の中に、70代60代のかたがおられるけど、幕末に生まれた方がいる事が凄い。

    • @Jordan3DS
      @Jordan3DS Год назад +2

      They saw Japan advance and change a lot through their lives. Imagine someone being born before the isolationist period ended and then living until the 1950s.

    • @user-cw4wl8ew4h
      @user-cw4wl8ew4h 3 месяца назад +2

      そうですよね?江戸時代生まれの人もまだたくさんいたのですね

    • @user-cw4wl8ew4h
      @user-cw4wl8ew4h 3 месяца назад

      2:51の赤ちゃんはまだ健在ですかね

  • @scaramagna1009
    @scaramagna1009 Год назад +17

    1:20 the structures designs here is so fascinating and amazing!

  • @yuzurucorner
    @yuzurucorner 3 года назад +1856

    It does sadden me as a japanese person how fast japanese clothing has disspeared from our society. I want to see more people outside in them. I like wearing them too.

    • @averagesinnerrepenting8917
      @averagesinnerrepenting8917 3 года назад +183

      Wear it and people will follow. Own it!

    • @EternalShadow1667
      @EternalShadow1667 3 года назад +316

      Worldwide problem, we all wear the same stuff now

    • @brunoalves-pg9eo
      @brunoalves-pg9eo 3 года назад +96

      @@EternalShadow1667 Nah, I've seen enough of these videos and people back then all wore the same clothes, specially in the west. Men always in black, woman with long dresses. We definetly have more variety now.

    • @musicaltheatergeek79
      @musicaltheatergeek79 3 года назад +89

      @@brunoalves-pg9eo Men weren't always in black back then. They had colored suits and such; they just came out looking dark in black-and-white photography.

    • @lobotomizadah
      @lobotomizadah 3 года назад +2

      @@brunoalves-pg9eo yea!

  • @whitewolf44a
    @whitewolf44a 3 года назад +826

    The oldest people in this video could have met a samurai or two.

    • @jrexx2841
      @jrexx2841 3 года назад +74

      The old woman might have been in her 80s or 90s making her born in the 1820s or 1830s

    • @dempkuun9253
      @dempkuun9253 3 года назад +7

      Was it possible for them to one themselves?

    • @lilblock3564
      @lilblock3564 3 года назад +3

      @@dempkuun9253 yes but no

    • @jrexx2841
      @jrexx2841 3 года назад +2

      @@dempkuun9253 what are you saying?

    • @dempkuun9253
      @dempkuun9253 3 года назад +19

      Jrexx28 my question is, could they had been samurai themselves?(the oldest people during 1900)Idk when the samurai status ended(or any Japanese history) so I wanted to know whether it is possible for samurai to still be around during the 1900s.

  • @bijouxbijouxbijoux
    @bijouxbijouxbijoux 11 месяцев назад +2

    Looking at this, my face must be as surprised as theirs, as if we are looking into each other, but in a different time...Incredible work & footage, thank you ♥

  • @s0doone343
    @s0doone343 2 месяца назад +1

    Very cool. Thank you for this!

  • @hindugoat2302
    @hindugoat2302 3 года назад +432

    we colorized this old footage!
    but turns out everyone was wearing grey that day

    • @jasmijnariel
      @jasmijnariel 3 года назад +15

      Or brown

    • @aasiyaummal2570
      @aasiyaummal2570 3 года назад +42

      It's not historically accurate , he already mentioned it right there

    • @FourDotSkills
      @FourDotSkills 3 года назад +16

      Actually, there was less of productions and tailored options were not present... Everything had a very limited range. Unlike now when everyone gets everything uniquely made for them..

    • @joshjames1879
      @joshjames1879 3 года назад +2

      Google global truth project and read "the Present" if you want to learn the truth about life/death in just a few pgs. Nothing is more important than checking it is true

    • @kamikazey_force8423
      @kamikazey_force8423 3 года назад

      @@FourDotSkills I disagree. In those days mass production of clothes was much less widespread than now. Many made their own clothes and so would be unique to a degree (though the styles would be the same but that's the same today).

  • @eddiedingle7689
    @eddiedingle7689 3 года назад +353

    "What's that called?"
    "It's called a camera, and you guys are gonna love them"

    • @thomasgrey6309
      @thomasgrey6309 3 года назад +7

      lol. I see what you did there!!

    • @xurrmusic
      @xurrmusic 3 года назад +3

      And then fujifilm was born

    • @mcdanzy8379
      @mcdanzy8379 3 года назад +16

      Guess you guys are not ready for it yet, but your kids are gonna love it.

    • @bomellp7470
      @bomellp7470 3 года назад

      Isnt it “are going to love it“ ?
      Sorry, I dont Speak english. Its probably wrong, but just out of curiosity.

    • @omisfitso
      @omisfitso 3 года назад +3

      @@bomellp7470 you are correct, "gonna" means going to and is probably mostly used by people who speak american english, i.e. the wrong english haha

  • @mochimochi114
    @mochimochi114 Год назад +3

    こんなにも貴重な映像資料が手軽に無料で観させてもらえる時代
    ありがたい

  • @user-co2mi4ju7q
    @user-co2mi4ju7q Год назад +4

    貴重ですね、大変興味を持ちました。

  • @tangchakyan4453
    @tangchakyan4453 3 года назад +879

    Its hard to imagine how people changed from wearing these traditional clothings to T shirts and jeans.

    • @samsammy9289
      @samsammy9289 3 года назад +21

      MrOverCritical1989 who is they

    • @ericktamasiro
      @ericktamasiro 3 года назад +17

      @@samsammy9289 who are* they

    • @joelarson1733
      @joelarson1733 3 года назад +123

      ​@MrOverCritical1989 If your cultural identity revolves around your clothes, you are already weak.

    • @SqLNhM
      @SqLNhM 3 года назад +5

      Only clothing has changed.

    • @jesseventura7598
      @jesseventura7598 3 года назад +161

      @@joelarson1733 Clothes are an outward expression which signify deeper aspects of the culture.

  • @loeuvrededieu
    @loeuvrededieu 3 года назад +229

    The fact that they're all so mystified by the camera makes it feel like they're just as perplexed about us watching them from a hundred years in the future.

    • @TetsToys
      @TetsToys 3 года назад +1

      I bet they had no idea that just a mere 100 years later almost everyone would be carrying a much better camera around in their pockets that can do so much more.
      Truly fascinating how much and how fast progress has happened.

  • @azillliasmith2734
    @azillliasmith2734 8 месяцев назад +4

    It's interesting to note how well everyone looks and how ordered and clean everything is ......

  • @briansontalia2502
    @briansontalia2502 Год назад +1

    Thank you. What i see is evolution and influence. Your work is such important.

  • @_catsy
    @_catsy 3 года назад +138

    With all those people staring at the camera it makes me feel like they can see us peering at them from the future through a time machine

  • @DemiDemiGlace
    @DemiDemiGlace 3 года назад +617

    After colorized and upscale, everything looks so fresh, hard to imagine this is 100 years ago

  • @songforjehovah5123
    @songforjehovah5123 Год назад +6

    I think this is an excellent historical document. Thank you for the high quality images of this valuable film.

  • @baseball_softtennis
    @baseball_softtennis Год назад +4

    いらっしゃいませ。がこんなにも今と同じ言い方だなんて。。すご

    • @NONAME-lo9he
      @NONAME-lo9he 3 месяца назад +1

      音声は後付けなので昔のものではありません

  • @DC_R
    @DC_R 3 года назад +772

    None of these people ever imagine that their faces would be in the palm of your hand in 2020 😶

    • @kamgrant
      @kamgrant 3 года назад +4

      @@fazzinho1290 😂😂

    • @devzcydee462
      @devzcydee462 3 года назад +5

      @@fazzinho1290 your face is in my brain everyday😌
      Not a Day goes By where I'm not thinking about you❤️❤️❤️

    • @mgm6229
      @mgm6229 3 года назад

      @@fazzinho1290 I am not sure the human species will be around by then.

    • @lazypotato6743
      @lazypotato6743 3 года назад +4

      @@mgm6229 we will surely survive next 100 years 1000 years is tough

    • @mgm6229
      @mgm6229 3 года назад +1

      @@lazypotato6743 I wouldn't be so sure. On another note, and quoting the other user, I can't understand why someone would like to have a micro computer inside their cranium. It will surely result in severe side effects. But anyway, to each its own.

  • @jurdanmaulana8779
    @jurdanmaulana8779 3 года назад +384

    Cameramen guy had no idea that hundred years later his footage is gona watched by 800.000+ people

    • @mutably
      @mutably 3 года назад +26

      On a virtual space, simultaneously from different screens. That's strange when you think about it.

    • @user-xv2dl5pi5y
      @user-xv2dl5pi5y 3 года назад +6

      @@mutably The word "screen" might not even be invented back then.

    • @customsongmaker
      @customsongmaker 3 года назад +10

      Jurdan Maulana had no idea his comment would be stored by the government for 100 years in a file with all his online activity

    • @nickpavloff8977
      @nickpavloff8977 3 года назад

      The coolest part my friend

    • @mxsantander
      @mxsantander 3 года назад +4

      It probably was watched by 800.000+ people during his lifetime. Film was popular back then.

  • @koichi2129
    @koichi2129 Год назад +3

    素晴らしい映像をありがとうございます。

  • @user-tt5vr2fo2w
    @user-tt5vr2fo2w Год назад +5

    1:16 この時代にクリスマスって単語が出てくるのが不思議✨
    2:05 掲げられてる幟の文字ってこの時代こんなに綺麗なの!?!?「君」の縁取りとか凄すぎ…
    てかどこもかしこも人口稠密でびっくり
    3:54 みんなお着物で装束がすごい!?
    4:07 亀戸天神?特徴的な橋だ…
    4:18 何この遊具!?めっちゃ面白いそう!時代に淘汰された産物なんだろうな…
    やばい!!!楽しすぎる!!!!

  • @user-cl5ex2wm1w
    @user-cl5ex2wm1w Год назад +70

    この動画に映っている人の殆どがもう
    亡くなっていると考えるとなんだか
    感慨深いですね…貴重な映像ありがとうございます。

  • @user-vh8rb8xi3l
    @user-vh8rb8xi3l 3 года назад +321

    彩りが加わるだけで実在感がぐっと増す感じがします。素晴らしく且つ貴重な映像です。

    • @GALE450
      @GALE450 2 года назад +10

      人々の集まりによる賑わいと活気は、今も昔も変わらないと感じますね^_^

    • @renanyctea1247
      @renanyctea1247 2 года назад +8

      本当に歴史の教科書に載ってる感じだったんだなって、結構馬鹿っぽいんですけれど感想抱きました

  • @brunoxd151
    @brunoxd151 9 месяцев назад +12

    It's crazy to think that none of these people is alive today

  • @yurienomura7364
    @yurienomura7364 9 месяцев назад +15

    30年後に大戦に巻き込まれるなんて思えない程豊かで幸せな風景😢

    • @kamint2258
      @kamint2258 8 месяцев назад +3

      その前に関東大震災が直ぐに襲いましたね。105歳とかご存知の方々がいらして、関東大震災、東京大空襲を経ても長生きされている事に驚きと、敬意の念を抱きます。

    • @kuniterustar
      @kuniterustar 8 месяцев назад

      ってかこの時代はちょうど第一次大戦 日英同盟で連合国側で欧州での戦いに参戦している時期だねちょうど 敵はドイツでそこで恨みを買ったかもw

    • @TSUNENI-UTAGAU
      @TSUNENI-UTAGAU Месяц назад

      ​​@@kuniterustar
      独乙と同盟を組んでたけど、「独乙」は「中華民国」を裏では支援してたもんな😮
      🇨🇳では、「独乙」の事を「徳国」と書くし分かりやすい😅恨み(逆恨み)って消えないんだよね~ ( ´;゚;∀;゚;)
      こわ~😂

  • @user-tg5ps3hm1n
    @user-tg5ps3hm1n 3 года назад +167

    当時の生活スタイルや、男女大人子供の人口割合が目に見えて分かって、とても貴重な映像を見せてもらえた。

  • @positronicreflex.
    @positronicreflex. 3 года назад +570

    4:14 not gonna lie, that rope thing looks pretty fun.

    • @Grnbaracuda
      @Grnbaracuda 3 года назад +24

      It reminds me metal benders in Avatar The Legend of Korra

    • @gianinnakarla
      @gianinnakarla 3 года назад +3

      It is

    • @mfcannoncannon4597
      @mfcannoncannon4597 3 года назад +2

      I agree ☝️.

    • @OnibiTeru
      @OnibiTeru 3 года назад +14

      There's a similar thing here on kids playgrounds, except it's kind of like a swing where 2 people sit on on opposite ends. You have to kick off the ground with your feet, taking turns to do it with the other person, all the while the thing goes around. It's really relaxing and fun tbh, even for older people.

    • @Francois_Dupont
      @Francois_Dupont 3 года назад +6

      we had those when i was a boy. at the top was a rotating thing, with many boys spinning around with the rope you would be almost flying.

  • @akamaru2024
    @akamaru2024 Месяц назад +4

    1913年でも、この時の50歳くらいの人は幕末に生まれた人だから何気にすごい。

  • @obama7792
    @obama7792 10 месяцев назад +1

    seeing videos from the past always feels so surreal

  • @franciryyy
    @franciryyy 3 года назад +681

    these people looking at the camera, just to be looked back 107 years after...

    • @rhydonify
      @rhydonify 3 года назад +15

      What if it's a smartphone of a time traveler? 😳😂

    • @helicocktor
      @helicocktor 3 года назад +19

      Imagine if they could look into the lens of the camera and see the future. Weebs and hentai for days.

    • @ACMDevils
      @ACMDevils 3 года назад +8

      and you told them ' you see that camera ? hundred of thousend of people worldwide will be seeying you 107 years from now' (goosebumps)

  • @XEN0FAN4
    @XEN0FAN4 3 года назад +479

    100年以上前の映像で、ここに映ってる人はおそらく誰一人として生きてないと思うし、誰の名前も知らないけど
    それでもこうやって私たちがこの映像を見ることで、映像の中の人たちが間違いなく生きてた事を証明されてるんだと思うと不思議な感覚になる。

    • @wilburwood8261
      @wilburwood8261 3 года назад +12

      田中力子
      ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E7%94%B0%E4%B8%AD%E3%82%AB%E5%AD%90
      1903年生まれでまだ生きているから、この当時10-12歳くらい。

    • @def_i.m_snow
      @def_i.m_snow 3 года назад +18

      彼ら彼女らが生きていたから、現代の我々も生きていられるのよね
      感謝

    • @aoishida0424
      @aoishida0424 3 года назад +27

      あと100年もしたらここにいる我々はほとんどいない。

    • @user-sw4oi7ir6o
      @user-sw4oi7ir6o 3 года назад +1

      @@aoishida0424 なんか怖いな

    • @user-ng5lq5wv8z
      @user-ng5lq5wv8z 3 года назад +2

      @@wilburwood8261 うちのばあちゃんの生まれた頃。

  • @leadcloud8290
    @leadcloud8290 Год назад +7

    It really hit me as amazing because if you talked to one of the old people in the video, they might have told you how everything was completely different 50 years back from the time when this video was made.

  • @ceruniia
    @ceruniia 6 месяцев назад +1

    Oh my gosh... this is so cool and crazy to think about. Like this video leaves me with so many questions now

  • @ANI-ep2ct
    @ANI-ep2ct 2 года назад +572

    道がすげーキレイ
    生活様式と美的感覚が直結してるのは凄い

    • @tonks-jf2zr
      @tonks-jf2zr Год назад +12

      それそれ
      なんか、今のスタイルはズレがあるんだな

  • @takuyakoseki21
    @takuyakoseki21 3 года назад +66

    日本人として大変貴重な動画だ
    今も昔も人々の日本人の表情って変わらないんだなー
    にしても綺麗な動画ありがとう

  • @kalem_tapi_kritis
    @kalem_tapi_kritis 10 месяцев назад +8

    This is the closest we can see what kind of Japanese people and culture looks like in Demon Slayer, since the story happened in early Taisho period (1910s)

  • @319yuka
    @319yuka Год назад +3

    いらっしゃいませどうですか〜って途中聞こえて一気に親近感わいた

    • @user-cw4wl8ew4h
      @user-cw4wl8ew4h 3 месяца назад

      古くから大事にされていた言葉なのですね 。
      語尾のませにいつも、古文みたいノスタルジックさを感じていました。この時代から既に商売の世界では定着していたのかも?

  • @stlemur
    @stlemur 3 года назад +235

    Regarding ambient sound, one of the dominant sounds of a pre-WWII Japanese city would have been the clop-clop of wooden geta sandals

    • @QuartoModulado
      @QuartoModulado 3 года назад +15

      I also felt like the talking was too loud on most scenes, everybody looks quiet and collected.

    • @SedriqMiers
      @SedriqMiers 3 года назад +14

      hello mcfly..........the fake audio detracts from the images, its fake because you can tell its from ppl within an enclosed space and the mouths of the ppl were seeing are closed..........dont do it again !

    • @hakapik683
      @hakapik683 3 года назад +7

      @@QuartoModulado All of the sounds have been added in. No sound was recorded with the film.

    • @MoogieSRO
      @MoogieSRO 3 года назад +7

      @@hakapik683 I think he knows that... he was commenting on the added-in voices. Which I agree with, too, in many of these videos. Too loud and too much voice ambiance in scenes where it isn't called for.

    • @remlya
      @remlya 3 года назад +7

      It was very distracting because the video and audio didn’t match. Trying to reconcile the two makes it difficult to appreciate what you’re watching. Not sure comments are being read though.

  • @momijiwalker7913
    @momijiwalker7913 3 года назад +90

    着物に帽子がもの凄くお洒落に感じる

  • @user-gj4ot8od6x
    @user-gj4ot8od6x 5 месяцев назад +4

    たまに「いらっしゃいませー!」って聞こえるの安心する