Great Japanese film about the pre-war corruption, code of honor and nationalistic pride that led to Japan's complete destruction. So many in the high command knew a war with America was unwinnable but militaristic pride and honor to the Emperor ruled their decisions.
Largest Battleship ever built used for nothing more than a Kamikaze Raid that took 3000 sailors.
Not an action film (apart from the sinking),but a Japanese snapshot of ne part of mindset that led to war.
Best watched in the original Japanese with subtitles.
*oh, actor who portrayed Admiral Nagumo in Midway plays Admiral Nagano here.*
Plot summary
It is the early 1930s and the command of the Japanese Imperial Navy determines to construct the world's biggest and most formidable battleship, Yamato. One of the admirals, Yamamoto Isoroku, disagrees. He recruits the upstart and mathematics' expert Tadashi Kai who discovers there are discrepancies between the official cost estimates and the actual figures. They soon find out that they have stumbled upon a conspiracy.
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A Nation Riding Pride to its Doom.
a different kind of war story
This starts with the sinking of the Yamato during WWII. Back in 1933, the heads of the Japanese Navy are gathering to decide on the construction of a new ship. Forward thinking Admirals, Yamamoto and Nagano, foresee the coming obsolescence of the battleship. They are pushing for an aircraft carrier but they are losing out to the old guards who want to build a gigantic battleship. They recruit military-hating obsessive mathematician Tadashi Kai to discredit the low-ball cost estimates of their rivals.
This is a different kind of war story. The start has plenty of CGI action but the bulk of this is about the procurement process. The drama is not particularly high since the general outcome is foretold by history. We know that Japan is building both and many more ships. More importantly, the war is inevitable. One side wants it and the other side expects it. Kai may be naive enough to think he can stop the war but the audience is never fooled. The end does have a few unexpected turns but the final direction remains the same. Also, measuring a battleship with a tape measure is more than silly. The obvious move is to steal or cajole all the costs and blueprints of previous ship constructions. Essentially, they arrive at that same idea eventually. The story does hold one surprise for its climax which I like but the tension is always held back due the overall inevitability.
A great movie about Japanese politics and culture
Folks looking for an action movie, a war movie, or a feelgood movie are not going to understand this film. The film is really about Japanese politics and culture within the Japanese Admiralty before WWII. There is a little bit of politics at the beginning of the movie, it transitions to a feel-good piece where the protagonist is breaking down barriers to solve a problem, and then the conclusion of the movie is the big political reveals. Reveals because the politics break into several conclusions on the part of the real hero's of the story who are in competing factions within the Admiralty.