概要:Following his early film "A Ilha Dos Amores" (1982) about Portuguese writer Vaclav Mores (1855-1929), this documentary uses Mores' words, photos, manuscripts, newsreels, and places where people still remember him. Wenceslaus Jos é de Sousa de Molais was born on May 30, 1854 in Lisbon. After studying at the Naval Academy, he served on several warships of the Portuguese Navy. In 1885, he first settled in Macau. There, he served as the captain's deputy and has been a high school teacher since the establishment of Macau High School in 1894. There, he married a Chinese woman named Feng Yizhen (also known as Acan) and established a friendship with the famous poet Camillo Pesangha. At the same time, in 1889, he made his first trip to Japan, a country that fascinated him. In the following years, he would return to Japan multiple times to carry out official duties. In 1897, he visited Japan with the Governor General of Macau and was received by Emperor Meiji. The following year, he abandoned Chen and his two sons and moved to Japan to serve as the Consul General in Kobe. His life there was characterized by his literary activities, chronicles he sent to several Portuguese newspapers and magazines, his romance with two Japanese women (Ó Yon é Fukumoto and Ko Haru), and his growing; Japanization;. In the next thirty years, Wenceslaus de Morais will become a great source of information about the East in Portugal, sharing his intimate experiences of daily life in Japan with Portuguese readers, which runs parallel to the activities of his contemporary, Lavkadio Hern. Weng passed away due to illness, and Wenceslaus de Morais was deeply saddened. He gave up his position as consul and moved to her birthplace, De Jong Island. There, he lived with Ouyang's niece Ko Haru until she passed away due to illness. There, against the backdrop of growing hostility from local residents, he began to dress, eat, and live like the Japanese. As he grew increasingly lonely and his health deteriorated, Wenceslaus de Mores passed away on July 1, 1929, on the German island and never returned to Europe.
Following his early film "A Ilha Dos Amores" (1982) about Portuguese writer Vaclav Mores (1855-1929), this documentary uses Mores' words, photos, manuscripts, newsreels, and places where people still remember him. Wenceslaus Jos é de Sousa de Molais was born on May 30, 1854 in Lisbon. After studying at the Naval Academy, he served on several warships of the Portuguese Navy. In 1885, he first settled in Macau. There, he served as the captain's deputy and has been a high school teacher since the establishment of Macau High School in 1894. There, he married a Chinese woman named Feng Yizhen (also known as Acan) and established a friendship with the famous poet Camillo Pesangha. At the same time, in 1889, he made his first trip to Japan, a country that fascinated him. In the following years, he would return to Japan multiple times to carry out official duties. In 1897, he visited Japan with the Governor General of Macau and was received by Emperor Meiji. The following year, he abandoned Chen and his two sons and moved to Japan to serve as the Consul General in Kobe. His life there was characterized by his literary activities, chronicles he sent to several Portuguese newspapers and magazines, his romance with two Japanese women (Ó Yon é Fukumoto and Ko Haru), and his growing; Japanization;. In the next thirty years, Wenceslaus de Morais will become a great source of information about the East in Portugal, sharing his intimate experiences of daily life in Japan with Portuguese readers, which runs parallel to the activities of his contemporary, Lavkadio Hern. Weng passed away due to illness, and Wenceslaus de Morais was deeply saddened. He gave up his position as consul and moved to her birthplace, De Jong Island. There, he lived with Ouyang's niece Ko Haru until she passed away due to illness. There, against the backdrop of growing hostility from local residents, he began to dress, eat, and live like the Japanese. As he grew increasingly lonely and his health deteriorated, Wenceslaus de Mores passed away on July 1, 1929, on the German island and never returned to Europe.展开