User talk:BlueWolf241/Nihonkai Daikaisen
BlueWolf241/Nihonkai Daikaisen | |
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Directed by | Seiji Maruyama |
Written by | Toshio Yasumi |
Produced by | Tomoyuki Tanaka |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Hiroshi Murai |
Edited by | Yoshitami Kuroiwa |
Music by | Masaru Sato |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Toho |
Release date | August 1, 1969 (Japan) |
Running time | 128 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Budget | ¥360 million |
Box office | US$2,490,711.84 |
Battle of the Japan Sea (日本海大海戦, Nihonkai Daikaisen, lit. The Great Battle in the Japan Sea) is a 1969 Japanese epic war film directed by [[Seiji Maruyama[[, with special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya. It was produced by Toho in 1969 and it was filmed in CinemaScope (TohoScope) and color. Another film released on the same day is Konto 55go: Jinrui no daijakuten.
Production
changeIt was the third film in the Toho 8.15 series (東宝8.15シリーズ, Tōhō 8. 15 Shirīzu), but unlike the previous two movies that take place in both World Wars, this film is set in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-05. It depicts the beginning of the war between Japan and Russia over the control of rival imperial ambitions in Manchuria and the Korean Empire and it depicts the Imperial Japanese Navy and Army fail in their attempts to seize Port Arthur, and the Russian Pacific Fleet bears down on the Sea of Japan. Since Shintoho produced Emperor Meiji and the Great Russo-Japanese War back in 1957, which depicts the Battles of Tsushima and Port Arthur. However, this movie only depicts it in earnest, as it was only briefly depicted in that work. It is said to be the first.
The main filming for Battleship Mikasa occurred at the actual Mikasa ship, which still exists as a memorial museum. With the full cooperation of the Mikasa Preservation Society, the welded parts of the cannon were removed and made movable.
Battle of the Japan Sea was the last film for Eiji Tsuburaya before his death. A dedicated team of 60 artists worked on the 107 miniature ships created for the film. In addition, the miniature of the battleship Mikasa was made up to 13 meters long. Due to the weaker shell power during the Russo-Japanese War in the Pacific War, Freon gas was used to represent the water column in the naval battle scene. The film was theatrically released in Japan by Toho on August 1, 1969, and earned ¥360 million, against a production budget of ¥350 million, during its theatrical run, making it the second-highest-grossing Japanese film of 1969.
Synopsis
changeAfter the Boxer Rebellion was suppressed, the countries that had dispatched troops, Britain, the United States, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, and Austria-Hungary, withdrew their troops out of China, but only Russia kept 50,000 troops in Manchuria and continued to strengthen them by construction the Far Eastern Railway system. Japan's repeated protests were fruitless, and negotiations finally came to a halt.
On January 12, 1904, at a meeting in front of the Imperial Court, Emperor Meiji stated that he would send a telegram directly to the Russian emperor Tsar Nicholas II, stating that ``the severance of diplomatic relations would be a misfortune for both countries, in response to the fact that Japan was leaning toward starting war with Russia. However, there was no response from the Russian government.
Minister of the Navy Yamamoto Gonnohyōe recommended immediate action by the Navy to statesman Itō Hirobumi. On February 5, diplomatic relations between Japan and Russia were severed, and the Commander-in-Chief of the Combined Fleet Togo Heihachiro began to capture Port Arthur in preparation for a confrontation with the Baltic Fleet coming from the Baltic Sea.
Cast
change- Toshiro Mifune as Tōgō Heihachirō (Admiral of the Navy/Commander-in-Chief of the Combined Fleet)
- Yūzō Kayama as Hirose Takeo (Lieutenant Commander)
- Tatsuya Nakadai as Akashi Motojiro (Army Colonel)
- Toshio Kurosawa as Sankichi Maeyama (Army 1st Class Graduate)
- Ban Kojika as Magoshichi Sugino (Navy Chief Petty Officer)
- Keiji Higashiyama as Lieutenant Fujimoto (Naval Surgeon)
- Akira Kubo as Kikuyu Matsui (Naval Captain/Chief Gunnery Kasagi)
- Makoto Satō as Kiyokazu Abo (Naval Lieutenant Commander/Chief Gunnery Mikasa)
- Susumu Fujita as Kamimura Hikonojō (Vice Admiral and Commander-in-Chief of the Second Fleet)
- Akihiko Hirata as Koreshige Tsunoda (Army Captain & Third Army Staff Officer)
- Yoshio Tsuchiya as Akiyama Saneyuki (Naval Lieutenant Commander, Combined Fleet Headquarters Staff)
- Jun Funato as Shigeatsu Yamaoka (Army Major/Third Army Staff Officer)
- Kenji Sahara as Hikosaburo Maruhashi (Naval Lieutenant Commander/Vice Commander Shinano Maru)
- Yoshifumi Tajima as Hikojirō Ijichi (Navy Captain/Captain Mikasa)
- Hiroshi Koizumi as Shin'ichirō Kurino (Minister to Russia)
- Jun Tazaki as Shimaji Hashiguchi (chieftain of Miyako-jima)
- Eijiro Yanagi as Itō Hirobumi (Prime Minister of Japan)
- Takeshi Katō as Katō Tomosaburō (Naval Captain/Combined Fleet Staff)
- Toru Abe as Suji Genjiro (Army Lieutenant Colonel, 1st Guards Infantry Regiment Commander)
- Masao Shimizu as Totsuka Tamaki (Director of Sasebo Naval Hospital)
- Gen Shimizu as Hakaru Narukawa (Navy Captain/Captain Shinano Maru)
- Ryūji Kita as Kataoka Shichirō (Vice Admiral and Commander-in-Chief of the Third Fleet)
- Kanta Mori as Ijichi Kōsuke (Major General, Third Army Chief of Staff)
- Gen Takamori as Nagata Yasujirō (Naval Lieutenant Commander/Combined Fleet Adjutant)
- Haruo Nakajima as Petty Officer Morishita (Gunnery Petty Officer)
- Seiji Matsuyama as Matsu (Miyakojima islander)
- Shin Tatsuoka as Inoue Kaoru (Genrō)
- Takamaru Sasaki as Kuki Ryūichi (Privy Councilor)
- Kiyoshi Kodama as Yamamoto Shinjiro (Navy Captain/Mikasa Squad Leader)
- Yoshio Inaba as Shimamura Hayao (Chief of Staff)
- Ken Mitsuda as Yamagata Aritomo (Statesman and Military Commander)
- Itaru Ose as Kariba Naval Lieutenant Commander
- Jun'ichirô Mukai, Naoya Kusakawa as First Fleet Staff Officers
- Yasuo Araki as Army Major Yamagata
- Toyohiko Sata as Hayafune boat fisherman
- Kōji Iwamoto as Hitachi Maru officer
- Yasuzô Ogawa as a Young man on the Hayafune boat
- Kazuo Suzuki as Miyakojima fisherman
- Chôtarô Tôgin as Artilleryman
- Seishirō Kuno as Lieutenant Tsukamoto
- Kenzaburô Ôsawa as Gunnery
- Ken Echigo as Mikasa officer
- Yutaka Oka as Shirodasukitai (White Sash Corps) commander
- Yoko Yano as Matsu's wife (Miyakojima islander)
- Noriko Honma as Old woman at the candy store
- Ted Gunther as Shriax (Exiled-Russian extremist)
- Jacob Japiro as Information provider
- Harold Conway as John Campbell (British captain on board Hitachi Maru)
- Osman Yusuf as Russian naval officer
- Peter Williams as Nikolai Nebogatov (Commander of the Second Pacific Squadron)
- Andrew Hughes as Zinovy Rozhestvensky (Admiral of the Second Pacific Squadron)
- Walter Jenckel as Oskar Starck (Finland-Swedish Admiral)
- Arthur Stark as Knyaz Suvorov captain
- Ryutaro Tatsumi as Yamamoto Gonnohyōe (Minister of the Navy)
- Mitsuko Kusabue as Kaeda Tetsu
- Chishū Ryū as Nogi Maresuke (Army General/Third Army Commander)
- Matsumoto Hakuō I as Emperor Meiji
- Tatsuya Jô as Narrator
Crew
change- Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
- Director: Seiji Maruyama
- Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya (special effects director), Noriyoshi Inoue (special effects art director), Yôichi Manoda (special effects cinematographer), Hiroshi Mukoyama (matte compositions), Fumio Nakadai (wire manipulator), Teruyoshi Nakano (special effects assistant), Yoshiyuki Norimasa (matte process photography), Motoyoshi Tomioka (special effects cinematographer) (credited as Sokei Tomioka)
- Screenwriter: Toshio Yasumi
- Cinematographer: Hiroshi Murai
- Composer: Masaru Sato
- Sound Department: Minoru Kaneyama (sound effects editor), Noboru Yoshioka (sound recordist)
- Camera and Electrical Department: Toshio Takashima (lighting technician), Iwao Yamazaki (still photographer)
- Production Designer: Takeo Kita— Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:444:382:CC80:1835:9C04:53F4:9D2C (talk • contribs) 19:00, 12 January 2024 (UTC)