`LETTERS' TELLS A MOVING STORY.Byline: Glenn Whipp Film Critic In the opening moments of Clint Eastwood's profoundly moving ``Letters From Iwo Jima Letters from Iwo Jima (Japanese: 硫黄島からの手紙, Iwo jima kara no tegami) is a 2006 Academy Award and Golden Globe-winning critically-acclaimed[1][2][3] ,'' we see Japanese soldiers digging ditches along the beach of the Pacific island they'll be defending. ``There's nothing sacred about this island,'' one grunt complains. ``The Americans can have it.'' Another young man writes in a letter home, ``I feel like I'm digging my own grave.'' The reality that few of the 22,000 Imperial Army soldiers would be leaving Iwo Jima Iwo Jima (ē`wō jē`mə, ē`wô), Jap. Io-jima, volcanic island, c.8 sq mi (21 sq km), W Pacific, largest and most important of the Volcano Islands. Mt. alive makes the holed-up defense of this tiny strip of land feel like Japan's version of the Alamo Alamo Eighteenth-century mission in San Antonio, Texas, site of a historic siege of a small group of Texans by a Mexican army (1836) during the Texas war for independence from Mexico. . In Eastwood's eyes, they are one in the same -- (predominantly) good men fighting vastly superior numbers and resources, resigned to the fact that they're doomed, but fighting anyway, with (for the most part) bravery and honor. With ``Letters From Iwo Jima,'' Eastwood has attempted a rare thing -- sympathetically, with clear eyes, telling a war story from the point of view of a one-time enemy -- and accomplished something absolutely historic, namely, making two films in the same year about one battle, providing us with an all-encompassing view of the tragic waste of war. ``Letters'' possesses the same drained-of-color look that marked ``Flags of Our Fathers,'' but the movies' approach their stories differently. ``Letters'' has a concentrated focus, a linear narrative, an intimacy that comes with most of the action taking place inside caves and, of course, subtitles. Its storytelling is traditional, save for the radical fact that it asks you to empathize em·pa·thize v. To feel empathy in relation to another person. with the ``enemy'' as they fight the U.S. Marines trying to kill them. ``Flags'' examined wartime propaganda and heroism, and ``Letters,'' written by first-timer Iris Yamashita Iris Yamashita is an Academy Award-nominated Japanese-American screenwriter. She was hired by Clint Eastwood to write the Japanese side of the story of the Battle of Iwo Jima, once rumored to be titled Lamps Before the Wind, then called Red Sun, Black Sand with an assist from ``Flags'' writer Paul Haggis, looks at these things "These Things" is an EP by She Wants Revenge, released in 2005 by Perfect Kiss, a subsidiary of Geffen Records. Music Video The music video stars Shirley Manson, lead singer of the band Garbage. Track Listing 1. "These Things [Radio Edit]" - 3:17 2. , too, from different angles. Some of the Japanese maintain that their American counterparts are ``weak-willed'' and ``undisciplined.'' There's also the belief that escaping to fight another day is the path of a coward; suicide, by one's hand or by holding an untenable position, is seen as heroic. Gen. Tadamichi Kuribayashi
Tadamichi Kuribayashi (Japanese: 栗林忠道 Kuribayashi Tadamichi (an excellent Ken Watanabe
Ken Watanabe (渡辺 謙 ), charged with defending the island with no naval or air support, knows otherwise. Kuribayashi lived in the United States as an envoy. He knows the Americans love their country no less than the Japanese and will fight, when told, just as valiantly. To engage the Marines, Kuribayashi eschews traditional defenses in favor of an elaborate, imaginative use of caves and tunnels that transforms Mount Suribachi into a human anthill. Suribachi, the key to the island's defense, dominated the action in ``Flags.'' In ``Letters,'' we see the flag-planting from the Japanese perspective -- here, the Stars and Stripes Stars and Stripes nickname for the U.S. flag. [Am. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 8567] See : America is tiny and distant, as if Eastwood is again noting the relative insignificance in·sig·nif·i·cance n. The quality or state of being insignificant. Noun 1. insignificance - the quality of having little or no significance unimportance - the quality of not being important or worthy of note of the event. History lesson aside, ``Letters'' is a deeply humane look at the men asked to do something most of us couldn't even begin to understand -- basically, as mentioned at the outset, dig their own graves. The film gives us several noteworthy characters, but the one we follow most closely is Saigo (pop star Kazunari Ninomaya), an independent-minded young baker who has promised his wife that he will return to meet their baby daughter. Through Saigo's eyes, we see the atrocities, the insanity and the random acts of kindness that come with war and feel the desire that beats in every soldier's heart sol·dier's heart n. See neurocirculatory asthenia. soldier's heart Post traumatic stress disorder, see there -- to get back home to loved ones. It's a universal feeling, and with ``Flags of Our Fathers'' and now ``Letters From Iwo Jima,'' we understand it more deeply and directly than ever before. Glenn Whipp, (818) 713-3672 glenn.whipp@dailynews.com LETTERS FROM IWO JIMA - Four stars (R: graphic war violence) Starring: Ken Watanabe, Kazunari Ninomaya. Director: Clint Eastwood. Running time: 2 hr. 21 min. Playing: ArcLight in Hollywood; Laemmle's Monica in Santa Monica. Expands Jan. 12. In a nutshell: Companion piece to ``Flags of Our Fathers'' details the universal desire of every soldier to come home. Profoundly moving and, taken with ``Flags,'' a landmark achievement in movie history. In Japanese with English subtitles. |
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