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M. Pathe (M・パテー商会, M. Patē Shōkai) was a Japanese film studio active in the early years of cinema in Japan.
M. Pathe was founded in 1906 by Shōkichi Umeya, a businessman who had distributed films first in Malaysia and Singapore and then in Japan.[1] He took the name "M. Pathe" from the French Pathé Frères from which he imported films, although the companies had no official connection.[1]: 46 Umeya built a studio in Ōkubo near Shinjuku, Tokyo.[2]
Purportedly based on Sun Yat-sen's suggestion to use cinema for the public benefit, Umeya sought to connect film to the development of science, industry, and education.[3]: 46 As a result, in 1906, M. Pathe imported more than 120 educational and scientific films form Europe.[3]: 46
An ambitious man, Umeya sent cameramen to Antarctica to record Nobu Shirase's expedition, and thus create one of Japan's first feature-length documentaries.[4] He put on a high-class show, with pretty usherettes and high ticket prices,[5] while also using his money to help fund Sun Yat-sen and the Chinese Revolution.[6]
M. Pathe documented the success of the Chinese revolution beginning with the Wuchang uprising and leading to Sun's inauguration, producing three documentary films that covered the revolution.[7]: 1
It was under Umeya's instigation that Yoshizawa Shōten, Yokota Shōkai, and Fukuhōdō merged with M. Pathe to form Nikkatsu in 1912.[4] His plan was to sever himself from M. Pathe's difficult financial straits by creating a trust that emulated the Motion Picture Patents Company.[8]