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- Titre original: 激動の昭和史 沖縄決戦
- Aussi connu sous le nom de: Gekido no Showashi - Okinawa Kessen
- Scénariste: Shindo Kaneto
- Genres: Action, Militaire, Historique, Guerre
Distribution et équipes
- Nakadai Tatsuya Rôle principal
- Kobayashi Keiju Rôle principal
- Sasaki Katsuhiko[Communications officer]Rôle Secondaire
- Amamoto Hideyo[Okinawa regional officer]Rôle Secondaire
- Sada Yutaka[Turtleback tomb's father]Rôle Secondaire
- Imafuku MasaoHeadmaster TeruyaRôle Secondaire
Critiques
The Anno influence
Chronicling the bloodiest and most pointless last stand of the Pacific Theatre, The Battle of Okinawa is far more well-known nowadays for essentially giving Hideaki Anno his career. Told in a quasi-documentary-like format, with black and white newsreel footage juxtaposed with narration from Kiyoshi Kobayashi over the dramatic scenes, Kihachi Okamoto manages to expertly balance horrific authenticity with few artistic liberties taken along the way. It's a film that captures an essence of bravery, lunacy and hollow childlike subservience, as well as the sheer devastating horror that gets increasingly desperate and progressively violent the longer it goes on, the final 5-minutes alone comparable to the likes of Saving Private Ryan in its entirety; Okamoto pulls no punches in the graphic details with his cynical, dark sense of humour coming out in full force. With incredible performance from its cast, most notably Tetsurō Tanba and Tatsuya Nakadai, a fantastic if limited score by Masaru Satō and energetic direction, The Battle of Okinawa is an incredible epic, one of exhaustive and continual bombardment that takes no prisoners leaving the camera smeared with blood by its dramatic end.Cet avis était-il utile?