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Gunki hatameku moto ni

  • 1972
  • 1h 36min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.0/10
1.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Gunki hatameku moto ni (1972)
DramaGuerraMisterio

Agrega una trama en tu idiomaOne woman's search to find the truth about her husband's death in World War II.One woman's search to find the truth about her husband's death in World War II.One woman's search to find the truth about her husband's death in World War II.

  • Dirección
    • Kinji Fukasaku
  • Guionistas
    • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Norio Osada
    • Kaneto Shindô
  • Elenco
    • Tetsurô Tanba
    • Sachiko Hidari
    • Shinjirô Ebara
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    8.0/10
    1.3 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Guionistas
      • Kinji Fukasaku
      • Norio Osada
      • Kaneto Shindô
    • Elenco
      • Tetsurô Tanba
      • Sachiko Hidari
      • Shinjirô Ebara
    • 15Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 11Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 nominaciones en total

    Fotos14

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    + 8
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    Elenco principal33

    Editar
    Tetsurô Tanba
    Tetsurô Tanba
    • Sergeant Katsuo Togashi
    Sachiko Hidari
    Sachiko Hidari
    • Sakie Togashi
    Shinjirô Ebara
      Isao Natsuyagi
      Isao Natsuyagi
      Sanae Nakahara
      • Mrs. Ochi
      Yumiko Fujita
      • Sakie's daughter
      Noboru Mitani
      Noboru Mitani
      • Pvt. Tsuguo Terajima
      Taketoshi Naitô
      Taketoshi Naitô
      Kôichi Yamamoto
      Kôichi Yamamoto
      Paul Maki
      Mugihito
      Shônosuke Ichikawa
      Hachizô Fujikawa
      Sakae Umezu
      Sakae Umezu
      Harukazu Kitami
      Hiroshi Kitasôma
      Nenji Kobayashi
      Takashi Sue
      • Dirección
        • Kinji Fukasaku
      • Guionistas
        • Kinji Fukasaku
        • Norio Osada
        • Kaneto Shindô
      • Todo el elenco y el equipo
      • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

      Opiniones de usuarios15

      8.01.2K
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      Opiniones destacadas

      10gatsby06

      Not just about Japan

      If you are thinking of watching this, you need to know what your are getting into first. This is a violent movie, in the extreme.

      I do not ordinarily watch violent movies. But I am glad I watched this one, even though I had to turn away a few times. The subject matter is about violence, and the director pulls no punches.

      It is so easy to romanticize war, either in victory or defeat. This movie clearly has a message for the Japanese people about WWII that the director intends them never to forget. That it was received so well, speaks well of the Japanese people's honesty. And it has a message for her Asian neighbors who suffered at the hands of Japanese soldiers, that perhaps hate is no longer appropriate.

      Viewing it as an American, I was struck by how different the image is from that of the well-disciplined soldier presented almost as a polite stereotype in Hollywood movies. An American director could not have gotten away with such a movie. However, I can't help wondering if this is perhaps not exactly a representative view of what Japanese soldiers went through.

      The movie is told very effectively through its plot, following the inquiries of the war widow into the death of her husband. As the truth comes out, it hits you in the gut much as it would have hit this widow.

      At the same time, the director apparently did not intend for this film to be viewed too narrowly as an antiwar movie. It is not just about war, and it is not just about Japanese soldiers, it is about human beings, and what any of us might do in similar circumstances.
      9squelcho

      Serious and sobering.

      I'm a fan of Fukasaku's gritty doomed gangster movies, and have come to expect a harrowing exposition of human frailty and self destruction, usually at a very personal level. However, this movie plays out on a much grander scale as it sets about exploring the nature of nationalism, militarism, obedience, subjective reality, repressed memory, and guilt. I'm hard pressed to think of a western movie that digs so deeply into the despair of war widows, or examines their feelings in such minute detail. Technically it's almost a documentary, but personalised by the heroine's relentless quest for the truth.

      Far from being a glorious affair full of grand heroism and precision munitions, war is a filthy business conducted at the sharp end by people who have little or nothing to gain by it. At the blunt end, the politicians and generals eat well and live a life of whimsical luxury while their forces starve and die brutally in foul conditions. Odd that so few filmmakers choose to explore the madness that sends millions to their death for overweening greed, imperial insanity, or even a bare faced lie. The Blue Max, Dr. Strangelove, and Oh What a Lovely War, amongst others, have examined the glib lunacy inherent in the equation, but Fukasaku's movie is all the more poignant for its protagonist's middle aged ordinariness.

      If someone tells you that Battle Royale is Fukasaku's finest hour, just ask them if they've seen this movie. It's not "easy" to watch, but it's educational and moving. Try it with rice instead of popcorn.
      9timmy_501

      A woman searches for the truth in one of the best films of the Japanese New Wave

      This is about a woman's quest to find out the truth about her husband Togashi's WWII execution over twenty years after the fact. After spending those twenty years attempting to get answers from bureaucrats, she finally finds some who have some empathy and give her a list of names of people that served with him. She travels to see these people and we see what kind of lives the soldiers returned to. First there's her encounter with a man who lives in what appears to be a mountain of garbage. He tells her that her husband was a great man, a hero who he owes his life to. This man tells her that Togashi wasn't executed at all, that he had to have died in battle. He is unwilling to tell the authorities this story, explaining that he doesn't like to be around people and he hasn't been to a city in years.

      Naturally she isn't satisfied, part of the reason she wants to find out about her husband's death is to have his name cleared so he'll get the same recognition as other people who died in the war. The next man, a comedic actor who stars in farces about the war, tells her Togashi was executed for stealing a potato from a farmer. The film continues on this way as Togashi's wife gets a different story from every man she encounters. Her journey leads her to people of various social standings including a blind man with an adulterous waitress for a wife, a leftist professor, and a retired public official. Each encounter brings her nearer the truth and gives her a greater understanding of the war experience. She begins to see how terrible it was for all involved and she begins to realize that nobody ever really recovers from it; in other words, a government's recognition of the death of a person it forced to go to war and essentially killed is completely worthless, especially when the government literally executes that person.

      Fukasaku's film is well plotted and it has a precisely executed theme. Further, the visuals are often impressively delivered. The editing is top notch, particularly in the scenes that suggest the main character's interior state. There's also some impressively handled "new wave" experimental techniques such as still frames and color filters. This film's style called to mind the work of more well known Japanese film-makers of the era such as Nagisa Oshima and Shohei Imamura while still remaining an original, personal work for Fukasaku.
      chaos-rampant

      Another terribly underseen Japanese war film

      If Japanese war films are snubbed in the West, that's not done on any political grounds. The Japanese are not only the first to condemn the rigid militarism that brought them to the brink of complete destruction following WWII but the only ones to offer that condemnation against Emperor and Generals in such a scathing manner. If you won't find films like this or THE BATTLE OF OKINAWA mentioned in the same lists as their Vietnam-war American counterparts like APOCALYPSE NOW, it has to do with the same cultural reasons that keep Japanese (or French and Italian) crime films in the shadow while Scorsese, Tarantino and their cohorts reap all the glory.

      And even when the spotlight falls on the individual, the lowly Japanese soldier haphazardly trained in a few weeks time and sent with meager provisions to conquer New Guinea, the Philippines, or Indonesia in the name of the 'Motherland', the focus is not on a heroic celebration of courage and valor because these men where not heroes and what courage they showed in the face of death was instilled in them by the fear of worse things like malaria and malnutrition or even worse, the fear of their superiors executing them for cowardice, but on grim endurance beyond all hope and glory with nothing else to look forward to but returning home to a wartorn devastated country. The chaos squalor and misery of postwar Japan Kinji Fukasaku knows firsthand. It's the place and time he grew up in and the memory of that misery would resurface regularly in his films as a bleak backdrop to the yakuza films through which he became known and for which he never received the acclaim he deserved.

      This is the greatest success of UNDER THE FLAG OF THE RISING SUN. Not the narrative maze of the script carrying echoes of RASHOMON and even CITIZEN KANE that has the wife of an executed soldier trying to piece together the life and death of her husband in New Guinea through the memories of his surviving comrades and superiors. It's the hopelessness and savagery of men trying to survive like beasts in the jungle, this relived in a booming 1960's modern Japan by the survivors in the form of flashbacks, that sets apart films like this and Kon Ichikawa's FIRES IN THE PLAIN from their American counterparts. Major battle scenes and historic events are in the background, presented in Fukasaku's trademark quick montages using stock photos. It's the day-to-day tragic struggle for survival for which there is no glory to be had that pucks the real punch and it's enough of a punch to make you ignore the problematic script or poor handling of exposition. In the end, one of the survivors living in a garbage-strewn shantytown outside of Tokyo, bemoans not the misery and destruction of postwar Japan but its rapid economic growth that has no room for scarred veterans like him. Vietnam veterans of 30 years later would relate.
      Squaredealer33

      The Best War Movie of all Time

      There are three great war movies. This film is at the top of the list. You will not be able to get these images out of your thoughts. I would not categorize this film as anti-war; rather, I'd say it takes a realistic look at the battle/conflict it portrays and does not flinch at failing to romanticize any part of the story. You might see the narrator's story somewhat romantic, but the loss suffered here justifies the actions of the character. All in all a brilliant story of war like you have never seen it before. The story also examines bureaucratic Japan after the war – that's where the story really packs a punch.

      There is beautiful scene involving a last meal that puts this writer/screen writer and this director at the top of my list. Great movie.

      By the way, the other two great war movies are, "Battle of Algiers" and "Queimada."

      Argumento

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      • Trivia
        Director Kinji Fukasaku used his own money to buy the film rights to the novel.
      • Errores
        Todas las entradas contienen spoilers
      • Citas

        Corporal Tomotaka Akiba: Here I am alive and well ... but this is just the dregs of my life. My real life ... ended over there.

      • Conexiones
        Referenced in Black Sunshine: Conversations with T.F. Mou (2011)

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      Preguntas Frecuentes13

      • How long is Under the Flag of the Rising Sun?Con tecnología de Alexa

      Detalles

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      • Fecha de lanzamiento
        • 12 de marzo de 1972 (Japón)
      • País de origen
        • Japón
      • Idioma
        • Japonés
      • También se conoce como
        • Under the Flag of the Rising Sun
      • Productoras
        • Shinsei Eigasha
        • Toho Film (Eiga) Co. Ltd.
      • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

      Especificaciones técnicas

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      • Tiempo de ejecución
        • 1h 36min(96 min)
      • Mezcla de sonido
        • Mono
      • Relación de aspecto
        • 2.35 : 1

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