A Brilliant Conflict
I am only giving this movie a 1 for the great cast, though I can't imagine what any of them were thinking. This movie was horrible
View MoreAmazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
View MoreThis is a dark and sometimes deeply uncomfortable drama
View MoreSaw this movie years ago, and recently found it on Netflix Instant play. I just have a soft spot for this movie with all its limitations... I must say that Pat Morita is basically playing Mr. Miyagi's long lost brother in this film ...But the point I want to raise is this ... Mari Sato, who plays Miyoko in this film, did not appear in any motion picture after this role, which was really unfortunate. However, I suspect, and I have heard this to be the case, that because her character has a sexual relationship with a Western (non-Japanese) character, some segment of the Japanese movie-going population finds that to be out-of-bounds, and the result appears to be that Ms. Sato has been blacklisted from getting any further movie roles.Something similar happened to a different Japanese actress -- Aya Takanashi (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0847328/) appeared in Mr. Baseball (1992) as Tom Selleck's love interest. That film was an international box office success, and despite her excellent performance, she, like Mari Sato, has never appeared in a film role again. What they share in common is that their characters were portrayed in an on-screen romantic/sexual relationship with a gaijin male.In both films, the sex is never depicted, but rather innocently implied. There are kissing scenes, and that's about it. However, I guess the idea that these two actresses play Japanese women who have sex with foreigners was repugnant enough that it warranted their ouster from the movie industry. How sad, unfair, and let's be honest, how sexist and racist as well! Granted, both movies are now 20-25 years old, and I wonder if the mores of the Japanese movie-going public, and the movie industry have changed. But I put this out there -- have there been other examples of Japanese actresses meeting the same fate? Can anyone confirm or challenge this theory?
View MoreThis movie was horribly directed, horribly acted (with the notable exception of Pat Morita, Mari Sato, and Dennis Akayama, all of whom performed wonderfully), horribly edited and the music was just downright deplorable. Now that that's out of the way, onto what I really think. The story is not a new one but I greatly appreciate the way in which this one develops (even with the horrible performances). It is worth watching the movie for the story alone and I deeply appreciate that Pat Morita, a man who had a profound impact on me when I was a child, had a major hand in developing the story and writing the script. This story demands a retelling by professionals who can tell it the way it should have been told. With how Japanese culture has been hot at the box office of late, I truly think that this movie deserves to be remade with a respectable budget, stronger actors, and a much, much, much better director not only would doing so serve to a give this story the attention that it richly deserves but it would also serve to honor Pat Morita, a great man whose recent passing is a tremendous loss to the movie industry and the world in general.
View MoreI stumbled across this movie in a video rental shop in Tokyo, Japan. The cover didn't really look all that interesting so I didn't expect much, but I have to say it turned out to be the best movie I had seen in years. I have looked for it many times since moving back to the US in 2000 but I couldn't remember the title. I finally found it, and bought it, this year.Noriyuki "Pat" Morita gave a stellar performance and this is one that he should be remembered for. I highly recommend this film.
View MoreI´d say it´s a romantic movie that takes place in wartime Japan. An enemy airplane get shot down and the flyers manage to survive the crash. They hide in a remote village... The ending song is heartbreaking.
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