Letters
from Iwo Jima

Director:
Clint Eastwood
Starring:
Ken Watanabe, Kazunari Ninomiya,
Shido Nakamura, Tsuyoshi
Ihara
Plot:
A chilling telling of the slaughter that was the Battle of Iwo Jima
between the United States and Japan. The film is told entirely from
the Japanese perspective, and focus’ on a small hand full of soldiers,
including Gen. Tadamichi Kuribayashi (played amazingly by Ken
Watanabe) whose undelivered letters home were the basis of the films
story.
Review: The Battle of Iwo Jima happened in February
of 1945, and it was one of the most fierce and bloody battles that took
place during the Pacific campaign of World War II. It was a turning
point of the war that is no doubt, but it came at a heavy loss. Not
only for Japan, but for the Allies as well. The battle is most famous
for the photo of three American soldiers raising their flag atop th
Mount Suribachi (the islands highest point). That photo is the basis
for Eastwoods film ‘Flags of Our Fathers’.
However
that film focus on the men who raised the flag, and how they had to
deal with what they felt was undeserved praises of heroism when they
got home. But its Eastwoods counter film (filmed at the same time as
Flags), ‘Letters From Iwo Jima’ which truly tells the story
of what happened during that battle. It is told from the side of the
Japanese, who were with out proper food, ammunition, and incredibly
out numbered. They were also left hung out to dry with no air or water
support, and no reinforcements, (what manpower was available to Japan
saved to protect the homeland). This would be the cause of what would
become a one sided slaughter. The Japanese did have the island to begin
with, and under the supreme leadership of general Kuribayashi they could
have stood a chance, but without proper support their effort proved
futile.
Letters
focus mainly on a few of the soldiers, and the general himself, using
very effective flash back sequences to tell their back story. One character
Saigo(Ninomiya) was a simple baker who had a wife and a baby on the
way. He spends all his free time writing letters to his wife telling
her his war stories, in fact he writes so many letters that the person
in charge of delivering them becomes worried that they might get suspicious
of him. So in one of the few humorous moments he opens a letter and
starts to edit it. Leaving Saigo in shock and embarrassment. Then there
is Shimizu (Ryo Kase), a former member of the Kempeitai military police
who was demoted for insubordination because he refused to shoot a barking
dog. Lieutenant Ito (Played very well by Shido
Nakamura) is a very uptight power hungry officer who seems very
close to losing it, and by the ending events comes pretty damn close.
Baron Nishi (Tsuyoshi Ihara) was a former Olympian for Horse jumping.
He is looked at as a celebrity, and is also one of the better liked
officers on the island.
Finally
there is Gen. Kuribayashi played to perfection by the great Ken Watanabe.
His leadership techniques were not liked by most of the other officers.
They believed it to be honorable that if they felt defeated they kill
themselves instead of being killed by the enemy. However Kuribayashi
wanted his men to push forward at all costs, and though he knew they
did not stand a chance his orders were “Kill 10 enemies before
you die”. It is believed that the battle that should have ended
in 5 days, lasted 3 months because of him alone.
There
is so much good about this film, Eastwoods direction was so well done,
and that Best Director Oscar should be a given.(as of the time this
review is being written Letters From Iwo Jima has 4 Oscar nominations
including best Director). This is indeed an accomplishment considering
the film for the most part is entirely Japanese, and I am not sure but
I don’t think Eastwood speaks Japanese. Though most of the primary
cast does speak english, a lot of his direction would have had to go
though a translator. Though this may turn off some viewers who do not
frequent foreign films, It could not have been done any other way. It
didn’t work in Memories of a Geisha (having the cast speak English
seriously hurt that film) so it definitely would not have worked in
Letters. The acting from everyone, well everyone Japanese, was very
well done. I say ‘everyone Japanese’ because the few American
actors, who were basically extras, were not that impressive. You really
start to feel for the characters, because the film teaches an important
lesson, that these soldiers were not the enemy. They were no different
from any other soldier fighting for any other country. They were human
beings who were called to war and fought for their country. Just like
the Americans, the British, the Germans, and so on. There was a degree
of brainwashing. Which is brought up in the film.
At
one point they take an American marine named Sam captive. When Baron
Nishi reads aloud a letter from Sams mother. The solders suddenly realize
that he is not what they have been taught, he is just like them, and
his mother is just like their mother. It is a truly touching moment.
In
fact the entire film is a touching moment, Its one of those rare films
that when the picture fades, and the credits start rolling. You just
sit, collect yourself, take a deep breath, and just...wow!
Highlights
- One of Clint
Eastwoods best directorial jobs ever
- Finally we
see a good American WWII film that is from another sides perspective
- Conveys the
important message that the ‘enemies’ in WWII were not
the soldiers themselves.
- Beautifully
shot
- The way the
film used flashbacks to tell the backgrounds of the soldiers
- The acting
was tremendous.
- Like the Last
Samurai, this is an American film with the Japanese speaking Japanese!
- Filmed on
location in Iwo Jima, Japan
Letdowns
- Hopefully
the DVD will fix this, but the subtitles were poorly done. Un-outlined
white text that was sometimes un legible.
- It’s
a damn shame that this received a limited theatrical release in
North America.
- Might, no,
will make you cry. Or at least wet in the eyes.
- Some of the
acting from the non-Japanese cast could have been better
Rating:
9.0 out of 10.0