The War at Sea from Hawaii to Malaya

1942
6| 1h56m| en
Details

Japanese Navy air cadets train for the attacks on Pearl Harbor and the HMS Prince of Wales.

Director

Producted By

Toho Eiga Co., Ltd.

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Reviews

Vashirdfel Simply A Masterpiece
StyleSk8r At first rather annoying in its heavy emphasis on reenactments, this movie ultimately proves fascinating, simply because the complicated, highly dramatic tale it tells still almost defies belief.
Marva It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
Logan By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Platypuschow The War at Sea from Hawaii to Malay is memorable in the annuls of history for a number of reasons. For a start it cost almost ten times as much to make than other films of it's time, in Japanese cinema this was and still is a big deal.Second that it's a straight up propaganda film! Released on the one year anniversary of Pearl Harbour it follows a group of soldiers during this time and isn't exactly historically accurate.Being a propaganda film it feels like a two hour advertisement for the Japanese navy and twists the events in such a way that it shifts the blame and puts Japan is a wondrous righteous light and America/Britain in darkness.For those reasons this can hardly be looked upon a historical film, it needs to be considered as much fiction than fact and viewed simply as another war movie.From a neutral perspective it is a competent piece of cinema, though it really badly does drag. It looks incredible considering when it was made and that explains why the footage would later get into the hands of the US who believed it to be actual stock footage of the attack on Pearl Harbour.Fascinating, but for the wrong reasons.The Good:Looks incredible for its timeThe Bad:Painstakingly boringCharacter development is pretty weakStill a propaganda filmThings I Learnt From This Movie:The film failed in its mission, and I still do not wish to join the Japanese navy!
Radu_A Just some info because no one else bothered to write a review - surprisingly so, as this is the most famous "national-policy-film" (kokusaku eiga). It's a recreation of the Pearl Harbor attack released on its 1st anniversary. It follows the life of a pilot recruit from being drafted until the attack in mock documentary style. At a budget of about ten times customary for the time, Toho had a scale model of Pearl Harbor constructed, with precise models of the warships present there. The attack was sequenced by Eiji Tsuburaya, using the mixture of light and editing effects that he would later work to perfection in the "Godzilla" movies. Famously, this footage was considered authentic by the US occupation forces, and hence confiscated and screened in newsreels back in the USA. That's what makes the film interesting to watch even today, while the rest is standard propaganda. Setsuko Hara makes an appearance before her rise to Ozu fame. Director Kajiro Yamamoto, who is mostly known for being Kurosawa's mentor at Toho, made the much better and critically acclaimed "Horse" (uma) just a year before. Rating 6.5/10