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  • Okay, good? Good, good? Ready. I'm  pretty nervous. It's pretty scary.

  • Why?

  • You're a very scary, intimidating character

  • No, no, I'm a gentleman.

  • A gentleman, of course.

  • Along Japan's rural Pacific coastline, 400  kilometers north of Tokyo lies the bustling  

  • fishing town of Kesennuma and it's here in  this beautiful but remote region where you  

  • might find an icon of japanese cinema casually  wandering along the seafront at first it might  

  • seem confusing as Ken Watanabe isn't from Kesennuma  or even Tohoku region at all but in the last  

  • decade his fate has become intertwined with that  of the town and its people in 2011 a devastating  

  • earthquake and tsunami destroyed much of Japan's  east coastline and after getting involved with  

  • the recovery efforts Ken never truly stopped  building lasting friendships with the local community

  • hosting major events and even opening  a popular cafe in the reconstructed harbour  

  • I was recently incredibly lucky to spend a week  with Ken Watanabe to uncover the remarkable story  

  • of what led one of japan's best-loved actors to  adopt Kesennuma and make it such a big part of  

  • his life and to discuss his groundbreaking career  as the first japanese actor to be nominated for  

  • both a Tony award and an Oscar with enviable  Hollywood success in movies such as

  • The Last Samurai, Letters from Iwo Jima and InceptionIn what may be one of the most inspiring and

  • undeniably surreal weeks of my life, this  was my week with Japan's biggest movie star.

  • You know I always joked the day that I met  Ken Watanabe would be the day that I would

  • leave japan because after that you know you've  completed Japan you've done everything

  • So this is pretty awkward I didn't expect it to happen  ever. But we are on our way to the town of Kesennuma

  • it's about two hours north of Sendai it's a pretty  remote place and we're going to the K-Port cafe

  • Ken's cafe that he's owned and run for eight years  now because of everything that's been going on he  

  • hasn't actually been able to get back to the town  in a while now so today is his first day back and  

  • later on this week Ken is actually putting on  an event where he'll be performing and singing  

  • with some famous Japanese artists.

  • Am I nervous? - Absurdly. But above all I'm kind of

  • excited and curious as this is a side  of Ken's life we don't really get to see much

  • off the big screen. I just hope I don't make  a fool of myself along the way, god forbid.

  • This is it, the K-Port in Kesennuma. I haven't  been here in maybe three or four years.

  • The last time I came up here, there was no Ken Watanabetoday hopefully we'll get a bit more lucky.

  • Good god.

  • Good morning Ken san.

  • Nice to meet you Chris.

  • Welcome to my cafe, K-Port

  • Thank you so much, it's a bit ofshock seeing you just coming out of the K-Port

  • It's a bit surreal but thank you so much

  • It's a beautiful blue sky.

  • Yes a beautiful day to come to Kesennuma. How does it feel to be back?

  • Shall we go inside? - Yeah come in

  • Walking into the K-Port you're greeted with  the tantalising scent of pizzas in the oven  

  • cakes being baked and coffee being  served, it's a dangerous place to be

  • if you're on a diet and as it's Ken's  first day back in the cafe for a while

  • there's official business to be taken  care of like eating this delicious cake.

  • As the owner, Ken's pretty involved in the menu  and after giving his feedback on the new dessert

  • he sets about signing autographs for the lucky customers that have caught him in the restaurant this afternoon.

  • On less hectic days he even gets stuck in and serves the unsuspecting diners, I mean

  • Imagine having Ken Watanabe just randomly bringing  over your pasta, you'd probably fall off your chair.

  • When customers come here for some lunch and  then Ken Watanabe is just walking around serving customers

  • You must have had some really surprised responses from customers when they're

  • like "Oh my god what what's going on there's  Ken Watanabe look!" it's not a normal situation.

  • K-Port is clearly a big part of ken's life even on  the days he's not physically present he hand

  • writes a message sharing his thoughts which  are faxed through and left at the entrance

  • of the cafe to welcome customers. With K-Port  recently passing its eight year anniversary

  • I wanted to find out why he'd chosen to build  a cafe in particular given his vastly different

  • background as a performer.

  • So when you started K-Port it would have been November 2013 right?

  • - 2013 yeah

  • Around that time I was in Osaka for my  first time and I remember I was on Ebisu Bridge

  • and I saw your face on a big billboard  and I thought "Oh it's Ken Watanabe!"

  • I wonder what Ken is doing right now and you were  here in Kesennuma opening the K-Port. To go from an

  • actor to a Restauranteur, was that a difficult thingWas it scary to open a cafe?

  • I mean we're sitting here drinking Ken's  favorite coffee brand and we've had a lot

  • of food that you've personally been involved in. I watched you eat a cake earlier

  • and give a careful analysis on the cream and the content of the cake.

  • Every aspect of this cafe is very much a piece of you isn't it?

  • I'm not going to pretend that this isnormal day, that was so surreal getting out the car

  • the door opens and it's just Ken Watanabe right there. To go from seeing him on the

  • screen over the last 20 years to just standing  in front of me is pretty trippy and i'm not going

  • to pretend like that didn't blow my mind, but I'm looking forward to getting to know Ken and

  • to hear his story and what he's been up to  in Kesennuma over the last sort of ten years

  • But yeah it's very trippy it's very weird and I'm not going to get used to that.

  • In the evening I'm lucky to be invited todinner celebrating Ken's return amongst his  

  • closest local friends with a delicious meal of  freshly grilled seafood and sake it's a great  

  • chance to experience the warm hospitality and  atmosphere that Kesennuma's locals are known for.

  • And always remember if you find yourself at  a Japanese dinner party the etiquette is to

  • continuously fill up the glasses of your fellow  guests and I'll admit trying not to spill a bottle

  • of sake over Ken Watanabe was a nerve-wracking  highlight of the meal. Two of the key people at

  • the dinner are Ken's neighbour Yuji san who owns  the fish market next door and Sugawara san who's

  • involved in the local business association and  who owns Kesennuma's acclaimed sake brewery

  • The sake of which i've probably enjoyed a bit too  much this evening the next morning i meet with

  • them both to hear how they initially felt whenfamous face arrived in town all those years ago.

  • If you walk around Kesennuma today, many of the signs of the tsunami have faded with the town's successful reconstruction

  • it's hard to imagine that just 10 years ago this  bustling town had been all but wiped off the map

  • along with over 500 kilometers  of Japan's Pacific coastline,

  • On March 11th 2011, a massive magnitude  9.1 earthquake triggered a devastating

  • tsunami that would claim the lives of over 19,000  people, trigger the meltdown of a nuclear reactor

  • and inflict an estimated 200 billion dollars of damage

  • Do you remember the day or  the moment you decided to

  • get involved with Kesennuma and get involved with the disaster recovery?

  • Ken started by launching a video  campaign online to raise awareness  

  • with support from fellow Hollywood actors and  colleagues, but after realising the scale of the  

  • disaster he decided to head north to help  people on the ground visiting 22 shelters  

  • across the region with supplies. He paintsbleak picture of what he found when he arrived.

  • Nothing.

  • How has coming here to Kesennuma and getting invovled with the recovery, how's that changed you as a person?

  • How's that affected your just personality and way of thinking?

  • Helping a town.

  • With Kesennuma's concert approachingtonight Ken's rehearsing with popular

  • singer songwriter Ami Ozakii who will be  performing alongside him on stage.

  • He's certainly a man of many talents, he can singhe can dance, hell he can even play the trumpet.

  • But of course it's the acting  career that Ken is best known for.

  • Ken's career took off in the 1980s when he  became a household name for his role playing

  • the legendary historic figure Date Masamune and  in 1985 he appeared in my favourite Japanese movie  

  • Juzo Itami's Tampopo, a comedy delving into  Japan's obsession with food. But it wasn't  

  • until 2003 when he rose to international stardom  with his universally acclaimed performance as

  • Lord Katsumoto in The Last Samurai alongside Tom  Cruise for which he was nominated an Academy Award

  • and after a stint on Broadway and in the West End  performing in The King and I, Ken was nominated

  • for a prestigious Tony Award in 2015 and withstarring role in the hotly anticipated HBO series

  • Tokyo Vice kicking off in April, Ken's certainly  not showing any signs of slowing down any time soon.

  • For a Japanese actor, one of the few actors  who's actually left Japan and had a really successful career

  • What keeps you so motivated, to sort of  push and keep going and have this incredible career.

  • I started working in foreign country films or something in 2003

  • - The Last Samurai

  • Yeah I was 42 years old.

  • From there I did

  • Inception, Letters from Iwo Jima or something, then I was over 50 years old

  • I don't have the target, I don't have the goal  I don't have the purpose really

  • Because I had a small target, like a tiny road, but then some Producers and Directors

  • give me offers for a great  Broadway Show or something

  • And I think "What I can't do it, I cannot do it". I cannot imagine about standing on the Broadway Show  

  • Did you decide straight away when you were asked to do "The King and I" did you say yes?

  • Or did you say no first?

  • The first time I heard about that I thought I'd never do that

  • I mean you've had one hell of a career is there  a particular film you look back to that you're

  • particularly sort of proud of you you really think  wow i'm really glad I did that?

  • I cannot compare.

  • Maybe being over 40 years old I feel about it like it's one piece of one album

  • I make the some kind of album then in my whole life, I have so many albums

  • One of my favourite films, probably my favourite  film that you've been in is Itami Juzo's "Tampopo"

  • I think it's just such a wild film. - I was 23 years old I think

  • Back then when you were young, it's strange  watching you in Tampopo and seeing you now

  • how far you've come. When you look back  at that time in Tampopo do you think you'd  

  • ever have a career like this? Did you think  I'll travel the world and I'll be in all these films?

  • I'm really glad because I always feel like not enough people have seen it.

  • I think it's such a unique film. Do you watch many films in your free time?

  • Are you going to watch the new James Bond film?

  • I've not yet. But maybe next week. And last week...

  • It's been reassuring hearing that even one of  Japan's most acclaimed actors gets nervous on  

  • stage from time to time and the next day with the  crowds appearing and Kesennuma's festival underway  

  • Ken's about to find himself performing  once again in front of the entire town.

  • Well here we are guys in beautiful sunny  Kesennuma, today the festival's underway

  • thousands of people here and Ken Watanabe is about  to come on stage with his band to perform in front

  • of a very excited crowd. It's not something  you see every day -Ken Watanabe performing. Here he is.

  • Watching Ken perform in front of the  cheering crowd feels like the culmination  

  • of an incredible week spent together in Kesennuma discovering what happens when a celebrity chooses  

  • to become actively involved in rebuildingcommunity not just for a day or a week but for  

  • an entire decade and with our time together  almost up there's just one last thing that needs to be done.

  • I've said for many years, the day I met Ken Watanabe and had a coffee would be the day I leave japan because that's

  • the ultimate goal right, I've completed Japan.

  • Oh my god. - This is my dream.

  • Inside my dream. - I don't want to see, I don't want to know

  • Thank you so much - It's still spinning 

  • It's still spinning. Finish the video now.

Okay, good? Good, good? Ready. I'm  pretty nervous. It's pretty scary.

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