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King of Snake
12-19-2007, 06:53 AM
Anyone seen this?
Watched it yesterday and found it very moving, and at the same time a very interesting take on the WWII genre by telling a story from the Japanese perspective. It had great actors all around and some truly gut-wrenching scenes (the mass suicide in the caves for instance) while at the same time bringing up some interesting themes, like how the Japanese soldiers were often caught between their sense of honour and duty for the homeland and their longing to be returned to their loved ones. Or how the soldiers on both sides are made to believe the other side are ruthless savages, but in the end they discover they are really all the same (reading the letter from the dead american prisoner's mother); normal people caught up in a deadly game far away from home. It may sound a bit corny but I thought it was handled really well in this film.

Only criticism so far is that I felt it was a tad long at 2 hours 20 minutes. And some of the flashback scenes later on kind of take the tempo out of the story once the battle is unfolding.

The film "Flags of Our Fathers" is supposedly the "companion" of this movie, telling the story from the American side. I haven't yet seen this but I've heard that Letters... is actually the better movie of the two.

Winston
12-19-2007, 07:40 AM
my advice, see flags of our fathers fast
it's eastwood in a serious way

then watch this http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091187/

it's eastwood in his funny gunny way :D

King of Snake
12-23-2007, 02:46 PM
ok just watched Flags of Our Fathers. It was ok, but Letters from Iwo Jima was definitely better.
Some great-looking action sequences though, especially the bits where you're looking from the cockpit of the fighter planes. But the story and characters didn't really do it for me.

I also remembered I had this documentary called Attack on Japan on dvd, which is actually about the battle of Iwo Jima. It's actually sometimes hard to watch, compared to the movies, cause you know that the images you're seeing are actually real. (although most of the docu also features reenacted scenes)