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Warriors of Budo | 65 mins | Documentary

For a master of martial arts victory takes seconds. Not losing takes a lifetime.


S 1 | E 4 | Episode Four: Judo (2015)

When dutchman Anton Geesink shook the world by winning gold at the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games, it was clear evidence that Japan’s firm grip on Judo was now broken. But it would be another fifty years before a young woman became the first American to win a gold medal in Judo.

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Director : Jon Braeley
Writer(s) :
Star(s) :

Summary
Episode Four: Judo
2015
For a master of martial arts victory takes seconds. Not losing takes a lifetime.
When dutchman Anton Geesink shook the world by winning gold at the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games, it was clear evidence that Japan’s firm grip on Judo was now broken. But it would be another fifty years before a young woman became the first American to win a gold medal in Judo.
65
Documentary
Details
Judo brings us to the modern era of martial arts when dutchman Anton Geesink shook the world by winning gold at the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games, it was clear evidence that Japan’s firm grip on Judo was now broken. When Jigoro Kano turned the deadly Martial Art of Jujutsu into Judo, he created a global sport with competitors in more than two hundred countries. The Kodokan Judo institution built by Kano, is still however the symbolic beating heart of Judo. One reason may be in the words of Kodokan instructor Mukai Sensei… “We do not think of scoring points. We aim for magnificent, dynamic techniques and from these come Ippon.” John Gage is an 8th dan Jujutsu master who took over the teaching at the US Embassy Judo club in Tokyo when the founder Sato Shizuya passed away. Nihon-Jujutsu has a rich hertitage with a core set of techniques handed down from legendary Budo masters such as Kyuzo Mifune and Kenji Tomiki. “For the most part, Jujutsu techniques were removed from Judo due to their danger. We all have the same joints and the same motion so now Jujutsu has a set of universal techniques.” America has never been a serious threat at major Judo competitions but that is changing with one man, team coach and 1999 World Champion Jimmy Pedro. “If I grab a Japanese players gi and we do his style of Judo, that’s not to my benefit. I have to use strategy to win.” Says Pedro. He is helped by hard working athletes like Kayla Harrison, the first American to win a gold medal in the Olympics. When Harrison won Olympic gold in 2012, what the world did not know is that she had been sexually molested for three years by her Judo coach when she was just fourteen years old. The coach was jailed for ten years and Harrison was later rescued by Jimmy Pedro and his father who set her on a new path to Olympic glory. “It’s a mental attitude” says Kayla, “and that’s what sets me apart.” In Episode Four you will be taken from the foundation of Judo to Jujutsu and then to the birthplace of Judo, the Kodokan. Our journey ends with the Olympic Games and America’s Olympic Judo’s rising stars.
Judo, Olympic Games, Budo, Kayla Harrison, Jimmy Pedro, Olympic gold.
Japanese
North America
United States
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