Author Topic: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work  (Read 2046 times)

Offline Ack-Ack

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #15 on: February 11, 2010, 03:37:39 PM »
Of course they're not happy. They've done a fine job covering up the atrocities committed in WW2 as well. It's simply not taught in school.

Actually, it was well received by the Japanese when it premiered and most of the protests came from the Koreans and Chinese governments.  The only real controversy amongst the Japanese to the film was that the writer is the governor of Tokyo.


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Offline oakranger

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #16 on: February 11, 2010, 03:40:45 PM »
Actually, it was well received by the Japanese when it premiered and most of the protests came from the Koreans and Chinese governments.  The only real controversy amongst the Japanese to the film was that the writer is the governor of Tokyo.


ack-ack

Yea, i thought that was funny. I may have misunderstood about the people of Japan that protest the movie. 
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Offline Rolex

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #17 on: February 11, 2010, 05:20:24 PM »
The movie doesn't glorify the war or the actions of anyone. It's a sad story about the real teenagers who were coerced to sacrifice their lives. It's about young people being sent to their slaughter, as they always are, by older men. The message is the futility of it all.

Offline Ruler2

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #18 on: February 11, 2010, 05:51:02 PM »
Really good fighting scene, better than any WWII movies i have seen.  

But it starts with a HOfest!  :D


Very good video nonetheless!

Offline oakranger

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #19 on: February 11, 2010, 06:23:44 PM »
But it starts with a HOfest! 

LOL, i started to laugh when i saw that. 
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Offline lyric1

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #20 on: February 11, 2010, 06:33:07 PM »
Ore wa Kimi no tame ni shinu. Or (I will die for you).

Offline GFShill

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #21 on: February 11, 2010, 06:35:55 PM »
Hopefully the DVD version will reach our shores!  Nice clip of something. Hope the rest is just as good.
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Offline oakranger

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #22 on: February 11, 2010, 07:29:56 PM »
Here is one on the battleship Yamato

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaWP7ONvhpY
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Offline TwinEng

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #23 on: February 12, 2010, 03:56:04 AM »
Yea, it is hard to face what you done in the pass.  Kind like what U.S. did to Native American Indians. 

Well, but the Indians were uncivilized savages, so it is hardly in any way at all similar.  Plus almost a century passed between these events.   Civilization had become more civilized during that time.   So the actions of the Japanese during WWII was far more different from the norm in its period.

Plus there was no real plan to wipe out the American Indians.   If there had been one, there would be none alive today.   In contrast, the government of Japan totally orchestrated the horrors they visited upon China, Korea, and several other nations.   Even today, diplomatic relations between Japan and both China and Korea remain strained.

It was a combination of many factors that devastated Native American Indian populations.   Disease killed far, far more than were killed by men.   And that was simply nature at work.

My own great great grandfather killed 3 of them in an incident while traveling from Missouri to California in 1854.  The wagon train that he was part of could not afford to let the small band of Indian warriors continue to trail them.   So he and several other men rode out in the opposite direction, and then circled around and ambushed the Indians as they continued to shadow the wagon train.  Indians were infamous at being horse thieves, and they were very fearful that they were waiting for an opportunity to steal their horses.   So they clearly had to be killed.

If these Indians had not wanted to die, then they should have ignored the wagon train and let is pass by.

.

Offline Tec

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #24 on: February 12, 2010, 10:52:38 AM »
^ sweetheartbag.
To each their pwn.
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Offline Tac

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #25 on: February 12, 2010, 11:03:41 AM »
Well, but the Indians were uncivilized savages, so it is hardly in any way at all similar.  Plus almost a century passed between these events.   Civilization had become more civilized during that time.   So the actions of the Japanese during WWII was far more different from the norm in its period.

You should read up on history of asian nations (not just Japan in general) to realize those actions were indeed the norm for that period (1900-ww2). Also, the native american indians had a higher civilization than most european nations of the era so calling them savages or uncivilized is not accurate.

Quote
Plus there was no real plan to wipe out the American Indians.   If there had been one, there would be none alive today.   In contrast, the government of Japan totally orchestrated the horrors they visited upon China, Korea, and several other nations.   Even today, diplomatic relations between Japan and both China and Korea remain strained.

It was a combination of many factors that devastated Native American Indian populations.   Disease killed far, far more than were killed by men.   And that was simply nature at work.

Not entirely correct. True there was no plan to commit genocide vs. the native american populations just as Japan did not have a plan to wipe out all other asians... but just like Japan the US gov. and the brit. colonists before them did indeed plan, prepare and carry out campaigns to kick the natives off the land the newcomers wanted and if the natives died by the droves that was good because that meant less of them would be faced when they expanded further.

Disease and war were both used on purpose vs. the native americans.

The big difference is that the US does not hide that which was committed while Japan actively denies it. Though you could say the US denies it in a more passive form in the way that just like Japan, the US school textbook do 'sanitize' much of the crimes committed.

Offline soda72

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #26 on: February 12, 2010, 11:57:30 AM »
Now all we need is another movie about how over worked the NAZI guards were as they burned off all the dead Jewish prisoners.   Then watch BBS posters proclaim how great a movie it was and argue how unfair the allies were in treating them because they were just following orders.  Nazi Guards are dady's too, ya know :cry...  Heck, we might even have a few BBS posters tell us how courageous they were for working around the clock as the evil allies advanced...


I think I'll pass on this one...

 ;)

Offline oakranger

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #27 on: February 12, 2010, 12:00:14 PM »
Well, but the Indians were uncivilized savages, so it is hardly in any way at all similar.  Plus almost a century passed between these events.   Civilization had become more civilized during that time.   So the actions of the Japanese during WWII was far more different from the norm in its period.

Plus there was no real plan to wipe out the American Indians.   If there had been one, there would be none alive today.   In contrast, the government of Japan totally orchestrated the horrors they visited upon China, Korea, and several other nations.   Even today, diplomatic relations between Japan and both China and Korea remain strained.

It was a combination of many factors that devastated Native American Indian populations.   Disease killed far, far more than were killed by men.   And that was simply nature at work.

My own great great grandfather killed 3 of them in an incident while traveling from Missouri to California in 1854.  The wagon train that he was part of could not afford to let the small band of Indian warriors continue to trail them.   So he and several other men rode out in the opposite direction, and then circled around and ambushed the Indians as they continued to shadow the wagon train.  Indians were infamous at being horse thieves, and they were very fearful that they were waiting for an opportunity to steal their horses.   So they clearly had to be killed.

If these Indians had not wanted to die, then they should have ignored the wagon train and let is pass by.

.

Twin, you really need to look deeper in the history and cultural of Native American Indians before calling them "uncivilized savages".  Many tribes where successful in agricultural, hunting and gathering and engineering skills long before Europeans arrived.  Your remark as them being "uncivilized savages" is long over due and attitude that irregular people like you and your ancestor used.  Native American Indians are proud people full of rich heritage, cultural, religion and skills.  If it was not for them, our ability to established anything in early colonial and American era would never happen.  So, I encourage you to spend a lot of time reading about them.

And, my remark in the early post about teaching Kamikaze, i was talking about U.S. education that dose not teach a whole lot about Native American Indians.  

Interesting story about your great great grandfather.  
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Offline RufusLeaking

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #28 on: February 12, 2010, 08:41:54 PM »
There are countless examples of inhumanity in wars between cultures.  In WW2, the difference in the treatment of POWs between the ETO and the PTO is an example. John Keegan makes this point in the opening pages of "The Face of Battle."

Back to the clip, it made the hair on my neck stand up.  My father was on CV-12, the Hornet.  He worked the engine room.  The gunners on the ship were given a medal at the end of the war for never letting a kamikaze hit.  One of his favorite stories was of a kamikaze plane that had two crew aboard.  He always questioned what the second guy was doing.

Unfortunately, Hollywood put artistic license over historical accuracy.  This clip proves that accuracy can still allow an intense, dramatic sequence.  It couldn't have cost that much more, if any, to make this as compared to the disappointing 'Pearl Harbor.'
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Offline Ack-Ack

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Re: What film is this from. Japanese film with a mix of real life and CGI work
« Reply #29 on: February 12, 2010, 08:44:30 PM »
The one thing that has always made me wonder is why kamikazi pilots wore helmets?


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