|
|
LETTERS FROM IWO JIMA
(****) |
|
Movie Review by:
Jim "Good Old JR" Rutkowski
Directed by: Clint Eastwood
Written by: Iris Yamashita & Paul Haggis
Starring: Ken Watanabe, Kazunari Ninomiya, Tsuyoshi Ihara
Running time: 141 minutes,
Released: 12/20/06.
Rated R for graphic war violence. |
"..a feat of
empathetic cross-cultural connection that Eastwood
more or less willed into existence."
|
|
|
Clint
Eastwood's latest film, "Letters From Iwo Jima," takes
audiences to a place that would seem unimaginable for an
American director. Daring and significant, it presents a
picture from life's other side, not only showing what
wartime was like for our Japanese adversaries on that island
in the Pacific but also actually telling the story in their
language. Which turns out to be no small thing.
Made back to back with Eastwood's recently released "Flags
of Our Fathers," "Letters" deals with the same World War II
battle in completely opposite ways. Unlike that big-budget,
structurally complex film, shot on location with
recognizable actors, "Letters" is a simpler and more
straight-ahead picture, shot in Japanese on the Warner Bros.
lot with a $20-million budget (and a 32-day shooting
schedule) that would have made it eligible for this year's
Independent Spirit Awards.
Though each project stands on its own merits, like the
panels of a diptych they inevitably inform one another.
Individually and as a unit, these films are a cry against
the awful, horrifying futility of war, a cry made all the
more poignant because it is made by a man who has been an
avatar of on-screen mayhem.
But while each film reinforces the other, it is "Letters"
that is finally the more remarkable accomplishment, a feat
of empathetic cross-cultural connection that Eastwood
(working from a script by Iris Yamashita from a story by her
and "Flags' " Paul Haggis) more or less willed into
existence.
Initially inspired by a book of illustrated correspondence
home from Iwo Jima's commander, Lt. Gen. Tadamichi
Kuribayashi (potently played by "The Last Samurai's"
Oscar-nominated Ken Watanabe), Eastwood has, against
considerable odds, made a film that feels both Japanese (to
the point of being accepted there by audiences and critics
alike) and like one of his own.
What Eastwood seemed to sense intuitively was the connection
between his own themes of men being men and the challenges
of masculinity, and the notions of honor, duty and heroism
that are embedded in Japanese culture and tradition. While
it is far from clear that any other American director could
have made a Japanese film or that Eastwood, for that matter,
could have made one in yet another culture, the fit here is
unexpectedly strong.
Also, though making the film in Japanese may sound arbitrary
(the script was translated from English, and subtitles
appearing below the images), the reality is the opposite.
When actors speak in their own language, they bring an
entire world with them; they give a sense of reality to
their culture that, for instance, even as fine an actor as
Marlon Brando couldn't create for his German soldier in "The
Young Lions." Paradoxically, the difference in language
makes the similarities between people that "Letters From Iwo
Jima" wants to emphasize so much the stronger.
"Emphasize," however, is a word that doesn't completely suit
the characteristic restraint Eastwood has brought to his
work here. He has so eliminated nonessentials, so gone away
from showy directorial flourishes, that his only
fingerprints are the absence of fingerprints, the way he
allows us to be unaware that we are watching a directed film
at all.
This is especially true once "Letters" gets past its framing
device of the modern discovery of a cache of correspondence
on the island. At that point we flash back to 1944 and see a
young soldier named Saigo (Kazunari Ninomiya) and a friend
digging trenches on Iwo Jima and doing what soldiers
everywhere do: complaining ("Damn this island; the Americans
can have it") and wishing they were back home.
Saigo doesn't know it yet, but his days of trench digging
are about to end. A new commander is coming to the island,
an unorthodox, energetic individual so consumed with his
mission he has trouble sleeping. This is Kuribayashi (played
by Watanabe with intelligence, concern and a feeling for
command), a leader who pushes a heretical strategy even
though it alienates many of his officers.
Rather than meet the Americans on the beaches, the general
decides to dig in in the interior of the island, creating an
underground world of 18 miles of tunnels and thousands of
hollowed-out rooms and caves.
Kuribayashi increasingly understands that defending this
island is a suicide mission, that the only kind of success
he can hope for is inflicting so many casualties on the
Americans that they will lose heart. To do this, he must
convince his men, many of whom are determined for reasons of
honor to take their own lives, that fighting to the death
should be their mission.
Kuribayashi has an additional reason for sadness. Both he
and his closest comrade, Baron Nishi (Tsuyoshi Ihara), who
was an equestrian gold medalist at the 1932 Los Angeles
Olympics, have spent considerable time in America and feel a
sense of regret that a country they are so connected to is
their enemy.
We discover this and more in part from the letters, read in
voice-over by Watanabe, which the general sends home,
letters that also have inexpressibly poignant details like
an apology to his wife for not getting the kitchen floor
taken care of before he shipped out.
We also hear letters from Saigo to his wife, Hanako (Nae),
as well as flashbacks that focus on how reluctant this
former baker was to go to war. We get similar insight into
Shimizu (Ryo Kase), who was part of the zealous kampetai, or
military police, before his current posting. And we witness
an encounter with an American prisoner that reinforces this
theme of unexpected kinship between adversaries.
For one of the engines driving "Letters" is a compelling
other-end-of-the-telescope phenomenon that plays out both
literally — the raising of the American flag on Mt.
Suribachi was up close and personal in "Flags" and a tiny
speck in the far distance here — and metaphorically.
Though war movies traditionally encourage our patriotic
blood lust by making the enemy faceless or worse, we realize
here, as the fighting begins, that the people we badly
wanted dead in the first film are precisely those who we are
made to care deeply about here and whose bravery this film
so admires.
It's not that we want the Japanese to win the war; it's that
we absolutely do not want these men we've come to know
intimately to lose their lives. The laconic, pitiless way
Eastwood shot the violence of battle underscores what a
waste it all is, underlines the futility that so many have
to die because of the misguided ideology of a few in
leadership positions.
Taken individually, Flags Of Our Fathers and Letters From
Iwo Jima are two of the greatest films on World War II.
Taken as a whole, they are an achievement by Eastwood that
is unequalled. |
|
LETTERS
FROM IWO JIMA ©
2007 Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures International,
Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution.
All Rights Reserved
Review © 2007 Alternate Reality, Inc. |
|
|
OTHER REVIEWS... |
RASSLIN' REVIEW |
|
Pay Per
Views and House Shows, we layeth the Smaketh- Down on
both! |
|
|
KIDS REVIEWS |
|
Dozen's of kid
friendly titles arrive every week and we review the one that
stands out. |
|
|
YOUR HEADS UP |
|
100's of new
comics ship every week, we give you a HEADS UP on them! |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|