On 13 January 1958, the grotesquely disfigured body of a man was
discovered near Lake Sembako in Japan. Two investigators from Tokyo came
to help the local police in resolving what at first appeared to be a
banal case, but which soon proved to be something more complicated. For
the first time, a photographer was authorized to accompany the police to
document the investigation. Press photographer Watabe Yukichi
(1924-1993) followed the inspectors as they questioned witnesses
(workers in a tannery factory, local police officers) and pounded the
streets of the most insalubrious neighborhoods in Tokyo--its bars,
bridges, alleyways and hospitals--in search of the killer. Like the
haunted film stills of a newly discovered noir classic, Watabe's images
record much more than simply a police investigation, and reveal a Tokyo
of the 1950s in a way that has rarely been depicted.