Otokotachi no Yamato (Normal Edition) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Directed by veteran filmmaker Sato Junya (The Bullet Train, Golgo 13), Otokotachi no Yamato tells the story of all involved in that fateful mission - those who survived, those who waited patiently at home for word from their loved ones, and the thousands of men who died aboard the mighty vessel. Featuring a fine ensemble cast, led by Shido Nakamura, star of Neighbor No.13 and Fearless, and a majestic score from renowned composer Joe Hisaishi (Spirited Away), the film is a thrilling retelling of one of the pivotal moments of Japan's WWII campaign.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Otokotachi no Yamato (Normal Edition) (Japan Version) 男人們的大和號 (通常版) (日本版) 男人们的大和号 (通常版) (日本版) 男たちの大和 通常版 (通常版) Otokotachi no Yamato (Normal Edition) (Japan Version) |
| Artist Name(s): | Sorimachi Takashi | Nakamura Shido | Suzuki Kyoka | Nakadai Tatsuya | Watari Tetsuya 反町隆史 | 中村獅童 | 鈴木京香 | 仲代 達矢 | 渡哲也 反町隆史 | Nakamura Shido | 铃木京香 | 仲代 达矢 | 渡哲也 反町隆史 | 中村獅童 | 鈴木京香 | 仲代達矢 | 渡哲也 Sorimachi Takashi | Nakamura Shido | Suzuki Kyoka | Nakadai Tatsuya | Watari Tetsuya |
| Director: | Sato Junya 佐藤純彌 Sato Junya 佐藤純彌 Sato Junya |
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| Release Date: | 2006-08-04 |
| Publisher Product Code: | DSTD-2566 |
| Language: | Japanese |
| Country of Origin: | Japan |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Greenland and the Middle East (including Egypt) What is it? |
| Publisher: | Toei Video |
| Other Information: | DVD |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1004191989 |
Product Information
世界最大最強の戦艦、戦艦大和のドラマを豪華な出演陣、壮大なスケールで描いた戦争超大作! 2005年4月。戦艦大和が沈んだ場所に散骨して欲しいという亡き義父の遺言に従い、鹿児島県枕崎へとやって来た真貴子。彼女はそこで生前の義父を知る漁師、神尾に出会う。真貴子は彼にお願いをし、戦艦大和が沈んだ場所まで舟を出してもらうことに。その途中、神尾は60年前のことを思い出していた…。 ■映像特典:劇場予告編(2バージョン)/特報(2バージョン)/TVスポット(11バージョン)/用語解説/海上自衛隊全面協力「大和はかくして甦った」(6分)
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Other Versions of "Otokotachi no Yamato (Normal Edition) (Japan Version)"
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Hong Kong Version
- Yamato (English Subtitled) (DTS Version) (Hong Kong Version) DVD Region 3
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Japan Version
- Otokotachi no Yamato (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version) DVD Region 2
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Awards
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Japan Academy Prize 2007
- Picture of the Year Nomination
- Director of the Year Nomination, Sato Junya
- Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role Nomination, Aoi Yu
- Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography Nomination, Sakamoto Zensyo
- Outstanding Achievement in Film Editing Nomination
- Outstanding Achievement in Art Direction Winner
- Outstanding Achievement in Music Nomination, Hisaishi Joe
- Outstanding Achievement in Sound Recording Winner
- Outstanding Achievement in Lighting Direction Nomination
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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features
Professional Review of "Otokotachi no Yamato (Normal Edition) (Japan Version)"
This professional review refers to Yamato (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version)
|
In terms of its narrative and visual style, Junya Sato's big-budget, CGI-enhanced World War II epic Yamato draws heavily from two landmark Hollywood films: reigning all-time box office champ, Titanic, and Steven Spielberg's classic war opus, Saving Private Ryan. In and of itself, this traceable lineage neither helps nor hinders Yamato, but one cannot help but notice the sheer number of similarities and their subsequent effects, both positive and negative, on this big screen take on a real-life tragedy.
Putting that issue aside for the moment, it might be best to address the film's subject matter which - on title alone - will likely be evident to most Japanese citizens: the Yamato, the largest battleship in the entire Japanese Imperial Navy. On April 6, 1945, the crewmen of the formidable Yamato were sent on a suicide mission to attack the US fleet near Okinawa. But without the luxury of air support to back them up, the Japanese forces did not prevail. In fact, the American aircrafts proved too much for the Yamato, and it sank, killing some 2, 475 Japanese sailors in the process. Like Titanic and Saving Private Ryan before it, Yamato begins with a frame story. On the eve of the sixtieth anniversary of the sinking of the Yamato, a woman named Makiko Uchida (Kyoka Suzuki), who turns out to be the adopted daughter of a Yamato survivor, attempts to find a boat captain daring enough to bring her to the site of the wreckage. Through a minor twist of fate, she finds herself a seafaring escort in the form of an elderly fisherman named Kamio (legendary actor Tatsuya Nakadai, from Yojimbo and Sword of Doom). After some initial hesitancy, Kamio decides to help her, as it turns out that not only is he a Yamato survivor but that Makiko's father was Petty Officer Uchida (Shidou Nakamura), a man he befriended all those years ago. Cue flashback here. With intermittent return trips to the present day, Yamato turns its attention to the year 1944, with a group of inexperienced young sailors hopping aboard the Yamato. Two of the men highlighted are Kamio (now played by Kenichi Matsuyama), and the klutzy Nishi (Kenta Uchino). Although there are many more characters introduced, the film emphasizes two in particular: petty officers Moriwaki (GTO's Takashi Sorimachi), and Uchida (Nakamura). The ensuing scenes involve a trial by fire for these young recruits, and emphasize the budding sense of camaraderie that quickly emerges from this grueling initiation process. But as these friendships and individual storylines begin to develop, they do so in the shadow of the inevitable, as the date nears for their total annihilation. Director Junya Sato delivers the rare war film, one which valorizes the soldiers without endorsing the war aims of their superiors. To be sure, there is a certain strain of nationalistic sentiment, but it either manifests itself in a sort of vague notion of a "Japanese spirit" or is counterbalanced by critiques or pointed questioning. And unlike certain other war films, the dissenting opinions do not emerge from the characters marked as "cowards," and are thus treated on equal, if not elevated terms. Yamato achieves another rare feat in that it is a war movie with no villains. True, the Americans are the de facto opposition, but they are faceless enemies devoid of any substantial negative connotations. Japan's involvement in World War II comes across almost as if it is a fact of life, not as if it emerged from any sort of actions taken by the Japanese government. On one hand, Sato can be complimented for not churning out a propaganda film, but on the other, audience members may feel that his apolitical treatment of the Yamato tragedy is a blown opportunity to criticize the Japanese war effort. Of course, it would be out of the bounds of the storyline to bring up Japan's wartime atrocities, but even within the constraints of the film's subject matter, there's ample room to critique Japan's war policies. Namely, how and why could the Japanese government condemn so many young men to die for no reason whatsoever? The film touches on this, but it really only goes so far as to give a somewhat convenient "after the fact" justification for the question: "What does it mean to die for a nation, especially if that death seems pointless?" Saving Private Ryan is, of course, the benchmark for depictions of war, and the gory, sudden, and altogether inglorious demises of many of the sailors in Yamato is almost as brutal and chaotic as it is in Spielberg's classic war film. Strangely though, there's an unreal glossiness to much of the movie that immediately disappears when the war scenes commence, which then proceeds to reappear once more the gunfire subsides. In that sense, Yamato sometimes feels like a live action video game, as things return to status quo once the fighting's over. Yamato's debt to Titanic isn't just in its frame story. Like its predecessor, this film is a melodrama, and in Yamato's case, it is too often a clichéd one. And worst of all, the "emotional" moments are poorly staged. To wit, there is a scene in which an officer tells his young recruits - most of them still in their teens - how to prepare themselves for death. He then proceeds to tell them to express their sorrow and call out to their loved ones. Consequently, the young men run to the railings of their ship and essentially "cry home to Mommy." I don't mean to be flippant about the concept itself (it actually could have made for some effective drama), but the terrible acting on display here makes the whole scene feel phony, incompetently manipulative, and very much out of place. And really, how many scenes must we get of the elder Kamio's eyes tearing up when he learns more about Makiko, Uchida, or the Yamato? This repeated focus on Kamio's unseen reaction robs the film of the emotional impact that the story so clearly deserves and the filmmakers seemingly hope to foster. And let's not forget the repeated scene in which two different soldiers' loved ones reveals that they're headed for Hiroshima. One scene like this makes for sad cosmic irony; two equals unintentional comedy. Thankfully, the inclusion of Takashi Sorimachi and Shido Nakamura does much to enliven the film. Last seen in films like Fearless and Be With You, Nakamura transforms himself into an unpredictable, yet honorable wild man of sorts for Yamato, and although his performance can be over-the-top at times, the energy his character projects is a welcome sight. Furthermore, the chemistry he has with Sorimachi is palpable, so much so that it makes you wish the filmmakers would have focused on drawing that relationship out a bit more. It certainly would have helped ramp up the emotion of the film's already action-packed climax. And if the core of this film is the depiction of the friendship among the Japanese sailors, then Yamato spreads itself a bit too thin. It's not just about how Moriwaki, Uchida, and Kamio became pals, it's about any number of different friendships. In this respect, Yamato seems to be a film that wants to be about the individual costs of war, yet somehow speak for every single soldier on the boat. It thus casts a very large net, incorporating various smaller storylines into the larger narrative. As a result, the "bond" that forms between the main characters is downplayed or ignored in favor of certain narrative detours, all of which take away from the main plot. It also doesn't help that many of the young recruits are rather wooden and interchangeable. And if you really want to be a stickler: if this is Kamio's flashback, how does he know about everyone's individual war experience? But even with these many faults - and an overlong running time to boot - Yamato isn't a failure. The film's pointed interest in the experience of the common soldier is pretty much its saving grace. Although the approach has its drawbacks, the ability to glorify the soldiers without resorting to petty jingoism is a welcome deviation from the war movie formula. Sure, its attempts to elicit tears from its audience seem ham-fisted and unnecessary. But ignoring that, Yamato, thanks to its strong acting performances and a purely apolitical message makes for an intriguing, if not wholly satisfying experience. By Calvin McMillin |
This professional review refers to Yamato (English Subtitled) (DTS Version) (Hong Kong Version)
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For many, the overwhelming success of big budget Japanese blockbuster Yamato is a key sign of a change in Japan's mood, a new willingness to look at the events of World War II in a positive light and a resurgence of respect for the bushido spirit. And while there is certainly a good case to be made there, I believe that Yamato has something slightly more in mind. Though set entirely in the war and taking audiences through the final days of the greatest war ship ever constructed, Yamato is not about the war itself in any meaningful sense. Yamato completely ignores the politics and context of World War II because it is simply not interested in them, rather this is a film consumed with the people who fought the war, the common people who - for whatever reasons - knowingly sacrificed themselves in the name of their country. It is a film that honors the country's dead and the nobility of the Japanese spirit while also, paradoxically, questioning the wisdom of that same spirit which compelled so many to their deaths long after the war's final outcome was apparent. Much like Titanic, Yamato is filmmaking as an event, a tragic tearjerker played out on a simply enormous scale. Wait a second! Did I seriously just compare this to Titanic? Absolutely, and it is a comparison that holds on a surprising number of levels. Not only are both films epic tales of very large boats, but the final conclusions of both are known to the entire audience before they ever set foot in the theater. Yamato uses an identical survivor flashback device as Cameron's film to frame its story, and both are shamelessly one-sided when it comes to manipulating the emotions of their audiences. Think DiCaprio played the doomed saint in Titanic? Well, Yamato's got twenty-five hundred of 'em on board. The story begins on the eve of the sixtieth anniversary of the sinking of the Yamato, Japan's greatest war vessel. A woman who we later learn is the adopted daughter of a former officer of the vessel, has come to the closest harbor looking for a captain willing to take her to the site of the wreck. After much rejection, she eventually finds herself a willing guide in elderly Kamio. Over the course of the lengthy trip to the wreck, we learn that Kamio served on the ship himself under the watchful eye of Uchida, the woman's father. From here on, we have Kamio's story told in flashback, from his underage enlistment while Japan's fortunes in the war were already in obvious decline - an attempt to live up the example of his elder brother - through to his first meetings with Petty Officer Uchida, and on to the great vessel's final mission, a mission all involved knew full well would end with their deaths but chose to undertake regardless. There is no exaggeration at all in saying that Yamato is filmmaking on an epic scale. A 190-meter-long replica of the original vessel - roughly three quarters the actual size - was built for the film, which also had extensive support from Japanese naval forces. The battle sequences are stunning and the cast sprawls. While the younger cast members are content to play their roles with straight ahead simplicity - all are there for noble reasons and none waver from their chosen path - the older cast gives the film the depth it requires to really sink home. Key are the performances of the mid-level officers, particularly Takashi Sorimachi's philosophically minded head cook and the always intense, wild-eyed, and reliable Shidou Nakamura as Uchida. Both of these parts are played with noble spirits as well, but both are also laced with the tragic air of men who fully understand where their end lies and what they are asking of the young cadets in their command, but who simply can see no other possible road. That Yamato was a massive success in Japan is no surprise at all. It is a well-constructed piece of work that delivers precisely what it promises - a grand spectacle that honors the dead, praises the Japanese spirit, and finds a type of honor in the massive military defeat that was simply unthinkable at the time. How it will play outside of Japan seems a little more questionable, however. The generation of Japanese lost to World War II would have been in their seventies and eighties now, and so the loss is still felt in ways that makes audiences there happy to go along with this idealized take of military life and sacrifice. Who, after all, would want to question the nobility of their dead grandparents? The film is so relentlessly one-sided in its presentation of its characters and treatment of military history that much of what would appeal to Japanese audiences, however, will no doubt rankle American ones, as well as other Pacific Rim nations affected by these events. Though it generally tries to steer clear of wartime politics by focusing exclusively on the people rather than the events, there is no way to divorce yourself entirely from political positions in a film like this, and the ones Yamato takes will no doubt be considerably less popular with those who had family on the opposing side of the line. The recent Hong Kong DVD release is a solid, low-cost option for those looking to see the film. The transfer is more than serviceable and captures the film in its correct aspect ratio. A DTS soundtrack is included to annoy the neighbors with during the battle scenes, and the English subtitles are clearly translated and capture the distinct quirks of each of the characters. by Todd Brown - Twitchfilm.net |
Customer Review of "Otokotachi no Yamato (Normal Edition) (Japan Version)"
See all my reviews
February 12, 2007
This customer review refers to Yamato (English Subtitled) (DTS Version) (Hong Kong Version)
| "Yamato" is a spectacular tale of military heroism and an effective depiction of the bushido spirit. When telling the stories of the young sailors, their training, their families, and their ultimate fate in battle, the film soars. Unfortunately, the contemporary wrap-around story is overly sentimental and unnecessary. The movie makes one regrettable attempt to explain the larger significance of the war. One of the naval officers explains that Japan failed to keep up with "progress" and consequently was doomed, but that the sailors' fate would be the seeds for Japan's rebirth. Of course, Japan's problem was not that it didn't keep up with progress, but that it subjected much of Asia to a rapacious empire, then foolishly launched a direct attack on US forces. Japan can and should draw strength from the heroism that is well-portrayed in this film, but it must also recognize the true roots of its downfall. I highly recommend this movie. |
See all my reviews
January 13, 2007
This customer review refers to Yamato (English Subtitled) (DTS Version) (Hong Kong Version)
| The movie was great. As a fan of the Yamato anime series, there is no question we know the true story behind the legendary ship. I certainly compare the ship to the Titanic. At 72,000 tons, the ship is largest battleship ever constructed. Engineering wise, the ship is so wide, the United States would not be able to construct it as their options are limited to the width of the Panama canal. The Japanese Imperial Navy never had plans on attacking the east coast of the U.S. The Yamato, meaning (Japan) itself, is so beautiful in the movie. As an Okinawan, we value the story of the battle. And also along side the Kamikaze, the men of Yamato should always be seen as heros of our time. War is never right. The Battle of Okinawa is a reminder to all that neither the Allied or the Axis has rights to slaughter civilians. Whether it was Nanking, Okinawa, or Pearl Harbour, the stories must live on. Add this DVD to your collection with Space Cruiser Yamato, Battle of Midway, Pearl Harbour, Tora Tora Tora, and later "Letters from Iwojima". The region 3 DVD is an excellent transfer. However I'm dissappointed that they have shaved off the ends of the widescreen to fit PAL. If you want the full widescreen please buy the region code 2 version which YesAsia.com has been the first to offer! |
See all my reviews
November 23, 2006
This customer review refers to Yamato (English Subtitled) (DTS Version) (Hong Kong Version)
Yamato
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This film is excellent. It is more a story than of watching fighting. It shows the war from a different angle, and how the japanese coped, with watching loved ones being sent away. It is very sad but is also very couragous. You really feel for the people on board the ship, and understand the way they do things. Buy it, this film is up there with the best war titles |











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