December 19, 2006 (Press Release) --
Directed by Clint Eastwood
Writing credits (WGA)
Iris Yamashita (screenplay)
Iris Yamashita (story) ...
Genre: Drama / War (more)
Plot Outline: The story of the battle of Iwo Jima between the United States and Imperial Japan during World War II, as told from the perspective of the Japanese who fought it.
Also Known As:
Red Sun, Black Sand (USA) (working title)
Country: USA
Language: Japanese
Color: Color
Certification: USA:R
Trivia: Shot back-to-back with Flags of Our Fathers (2006). (more)
Awards: Nominated for 2 Golden Globes. Another 1 win
User Comments:
I might be home right now, but I still feel like I'm in the movie theater. I still hear the explosions. I still hear the undeniably confusing Japanese language. I still hear the sounds of agony that war brings. That is just how powerful ''Letters From Iwo Jima'' can be.
In October, Clint Eastwood launched the hyped ''Flags of our Fathers'', that was said to be the champion of the year. However, the movie was a huge disappointment, proving to be a clichéd war drama that added nothing new to the genre. I was very sad with Eastwood, I have to admit. However, the man had one more card up his sleeve.
''Letters From Iwo Jima'' is pure art-house war drama, a massive monster of a movie that differs from everything Eastwood has ever made. It ranks with ''The Unforgiven'' as Eastwood's best movie.
The story is basically the Japanese point of view of ''Flags of our Fathers''. While the latter had many scenes showing the glory of Americans, veterans returning home being greeted as heroes, and a tone of victory all over, ''Jima'' proves to be completely different. There is no glory for the Japanese, only pain. Veterans aren't greeted as heroes because they don't return home. There is no tone of victory, but a huge cloud of defeat. ''Jima'' is dark, resembling a black-and-white film, and it is one of the saddest movies of the year.
Ken Watanabe shines as general Tadamishi Kuribayachi (or something similar). He shows why he's one of the most talented Japanese actors around and proves he deserves another Oscar nomination. Kazunari Ninomiya deserves a lot of praise as well. His composition of Saigo, the baker turned soldier, is achingly true: a frightened, anxious man, but one full of hope and with one dream: to come back home to see his daughter.
Eastwood's direction is also worthy of immense recognition. It is tough for me to say this but, if there was one man capable of taking the Best Director Oscar out of Scorsese's hands, it would be Eastwood again. Not saying ''Jima'' is better than ''The Departed'' (Scorsese's film is superior, but not by much).
Source: http://www.yahoo.com
Writing credits (WGA)
Iris Yamashita (screenplay)
Iris Yamashita (story) ...
Genre: Drama / War (more)
Plot Outline: The story of the battle of Iwo Jima between the United States and Imperial Japan during World War II, as told from the perspective of the Japanese who fought it.
Also Known As:
Red Sun, Black Sand (USA) (working title)
Country: USA
Language: Japanese
Color: Color
Certification: USA:R
Trivia: Shot back-to-back with Flags of Our Fathers (2006). (more)
Awards: Nominated for 2 Golden Globes. Another 1 win
User Comments:
I might be home right now, but I still feel like I'm in the movie theater. I still hear the explosions. I still hear the undeniably confusing Japanese language. I still hear the sounds of agony that war brings. That is just how powerful ''Letters From Iwo Jima'' can be.
In October, Clint Eastwood launched the hyped ''Flags of our Fathers'', that was said to be the champion of the year. However, the movie was a huge disappointment, proving to be a clichéd war drama that added nothing new to the genre. I was very sad with Eastwood, I have to admit. However, the man had one more card up his sleeve.
''Letters From Iwo Jima'' is pure art-house war drama, a massive monster of a movie that differs from everything Eastwood has ever made. It ranks with ''The Unforgiven'' as Eastwood's best movie.
The story is basically the Japanese point of view of ''Flags of our Fathers''. While the latter had many scenes showing the glory of Americans, veterans returning home being greeted as heroes, and a tone of victory all over, ''Jima'' proves to be completely different. There is no glory for the Japanese, only pain. Veterans aren't greeted as heroes because they don't return home. There is no tone of victory, but a huge cloud of defeat. ''Jima'' is dark, resembling a black-and-white film, and it is one of the saddest movies of the year.
Ken Watanabe shines as general Tadamishi Kuribayachi (or something similar). He shows why he's one of the most talented Japanese actors around and proves he deserves another Oscar nomination. Kazunari Ninomiya deserves a lot of praise as well. His composition of Saigo, the baker turned soldier, is achingly true: a frightened, anxious man, but one full of hope and with one dream: to come back home to see his daughter.
Eastwood's direction is also worthy of immense recognition. It is tough for me to say this but, if there was one man capable of taking the Best Director Oscar out of Scorsese's hands, it would be Eastwood again. Not saying ''Jima'' is better than ''The Departed'' (Scorsese's film is superior, but not by much).
Source: http://www.yahoo.com

The story of the battle of Iwo Jima between the United States and Imperial Japan during World War II, as told from the perspective of the Japanese who fought it.
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