Letters From Iwo Jima
Letters From Iwo Jima Movie
Director:
Clint Eastwood
Cast:
Ken Watanabe, Kazunari Ninomiya, Tsuyoshi Ihara, Ryo Kase, Shido
Nakamura, Yuki Matsuzaki, Hiroshi Watanabe, Takumi Bando, Nobumasa
Sakagami
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Synopsis
After
bringing the story of the American soldiers who fought in the battle of
Iwo Jima to the screen in his film Flags of Our Fathers, Clint Eastwood
offers an equally thoughtful portrait of the Japanese forces who held
the island for 36 days in this military drama. In 1945, World War II
was in its last stages, and U.S. forces were planning to take on the
Japanese on a small island known as Iwo Jima. While the island was
mostly rock and volcanoes, it was of key strategic value and Japan's
leaders saw the island as the final opportunity to prevent an Allied
invasion. Lt. General Tadamichi Kuribayashi (Ken Watanabe) was put in
charge of the forces on Iwo Jima; Kuribayashi had spent time in the
United States and was not eager to take on the American army, but he
also understood his opponents in a way his superiors did not, and
devised an unusual strategy of digging tunnels and deep foxholes that
allowed his troops a tactical advantage over the invading soldiers. While Kuribayashi's strategy alienated some older officers, it impressed Baron Nishi (Tsuyoshi Ihara), the son of a wealthy family who had also studied America firsthand as an athlete at the 1932 Olympics. As Kuribayashi and his men dig in for a battle they are not certain they can win -- and most have been told they will not survive -- their story is told both by watching their actions and through the letters they write home to their loved ones, letters that in many cases would not be delivered until long after they were dead. Among the soldiers manning Japan's last line of defense are Saigo (Kazunari Ninomiya), a baker sent to Iwo Jima only days before his wife was to give birth; Shimizu (Ryo Kase), who was sent to Iwo Jima after washing out in the military police; and Lieutenant Ito (Shidou Nakamura), who has embraced the notion of "Death Before Surrender" with particular ferocity. Filmed in Japanese with a primarily Japanese cast, Letters From Iwo Jima was shot in tandem with Flags of Our Fathers, and the two films were released within two months of one another |
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