Chapter 1
Near the end of World War II, in April of 1945, a big Allied incendiary air raid burns Akabane. He young man watches as the opposite shore of the Arakawa river is engulfed in flames. The red becomes the flames of an iron foundry.
Chapter 2
The boy, who has a hard time getting used to the downtown district that he grew up in, ends up going to the Kaisei Middle School in Tokyo. Whenever he meets his childhood friends who went to the local middle school in their old neighborhood, the boy can’t escape the guilty feeling that he was the only one who managed to get out of the neighborhood.
Chapter 3
There are recollections of the [Korean] classmate, Momozono. He was a good student, but his family was poor, and we learn that he fell from a cliff and died while attending a night high school.
Chapter 4
In high school, the young man intended to go to art college, but he became absorbed in the “New Theater” movement that was emerging at the time. He went to see Juro Miyoshi and said that he wanted to study theater. Miyoshi’s answer was, “If you really want to do theater, come back after you have watched it well and seriously.”
Chapter 5
After failing the art college entrance exam, the young man decided to become an actor. He entered the company Gekidan Seihai , where there were famed theater veterans like Isao Kimura, Eiji Okada and Takeshi Kurahashi, and there he also met the actress Tomoko Mayama, who later became his wife, and the playwright Kunio Shimizu.
Chapter 6
The mature man talks about the 1960s when theater shown like a beacon, using expressions like, “Theater comes like a blast of hot wind,” or “I am waiting for that one moment, this one moment.” But beneath his words is a sense that in spite of being there at the time of that hot wind, he had missed his chance for those special moments.
Chapter 7
The setting shifts to 1967, and the young man reminisces about the period when he quit the company and started his own company Gendaijin Gekidan (Modern People’s Theater company) to stage theater works written by Shimizu.
Chapter 8
The Modern People’s Theater company was disbanded after their performances of Karasu-yo, Ore-tachi ha Tama wo Komeru (Ravens, We Shall Load Bullets). With his theater friends the young man forms a new company “Sakura-sha.” Later a young man he didn’t know put a knife to him and said, “Ninagawa-san, can you talk about your hopes now?” For him, there were always a thousand knives in every audience. So, he decided never to lose the courage to stand in such a dangerous position. And with that determination he disbanded Sakura-sha. From 1974, he entered the world of commercial theater.
Chapter 9
The setting changes to the Ninagawa’s home. Asked how he made a living through the 1970s, the young man answers, “As my wife’s handler,” and goes on to talk about that time. The scene shows how Ninagawa’s wife Mayama was working and he staying home to care for their children.
Chapter 10
The mature man comes out in a wheelchair. He talks about his discomfort with aging and the decline of his physical condition and sensibilities. Before his eye extend the scenes of memories from his lifetime.
Epilogue
In front of a group of lost old people, a mature man in the prime of life, a boy, and a young man appear. They talk between themselves about their memories. Eventually the mature man alone is left, and then the “Nina” entity appears. The two emerge from the darkness, searching for the bright flash, that moment when theater shown like a beacon.