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poster of Battle of the Japan Sea
Rating: 6/10 by 6 users

Battle of the Japan Sea (1969)

Japan and Russia clash in what comes to be known as the Russo-Japanese War. An attempt by the Japanese fleet and army to take Port Arthur fails, and a Russian fleet bears down on the Sea of Japan. Admiral Heihachiro Togo sends his fleet to confront the Russians, with results which stun both nations. Meanwhile, Major Genjiro Akashi makes secret negotiations with the Bolshevik revolutionaries in Russia, negotiations that have repercussions far beyond the conflict at hand.

Directing:
  • Seiji Maruyama
Writing:
  • Toshio Yasumi
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Aug 01, 1969

Rating: 6/10 by 6 users

Alternative Title:
Battle of the Japan Sea - US
Battle in the Sea of Japan - US
Nihonkai daikaisen - JP
日本海大海戦 - JP
Great Battle of the Japan Sea - US

Country:
Japan
Language:
日本語
Runtime: 02 hour 08 minutes
Budget: $973,000
Revenue: $960,000

Plot Keyword: japan, manchuria, naval combat, russian history, imperial japan, 1900s, russo-japanese war, history of japan, port arthur

Toshirō Mifune
Admiral Heihachiro Togo
Tatsuya Nakadai
Major Genjiro Akashi
Yūzō Kayama
Cmdr. Hirose
Chishū Ryū
General Maresuke Nogi
Ryūtarō Tatsumi
General Gonbei Yamamoto
Matsumoto Hakuō I
The Emperor Meiji
Toshio Kurosawa
Pfc. Maeyama
Makoto Satō
Gunnery Chief of Security
Akihiko Hirata
Staff Officer Tsunoda
Yoshio Tsuchiya
Staff Officer Akiyama
Jun Tazaki
Shimaji Hashiguchi
Takeshi Katō
Chief of Staff Officer Kato
Jun Funato
Staff Officer Yamaoka
Eijirō Yanagi
Hirofumi Ito
Kanta Mori
Chief of Staff Officer Ijichi
Shin Takioka
Kaoru Inoue
Takamaru Sasaki
Consultant Kuki
Yoshio Inaba
Chief of Staff Officer Shimamura
Ken Mitsuda
Ariaki Yamagata
Ted Gunther
Shuriakusu
Harold Conway
Captain John Campbell
Osman Yusuf
Russian Officer
Peter Williams
Admiral Nebagotov
Andrew Hughes
Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky (General Commander of Baltic Fleet)

watchman

Seiji Maruyama’s sanitized docu-drama, retelling the Japanese conduct of the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905, which culminated with Japan’s stunning naval victory in the Tsushima Strait. Tsushima’s significance is practically mythic, amounting to a national symbol. From a director who has shown reverence for military values, you might expect a painstakingly conscientious propaganda film. That’s what you get here, complete with diagrams and explanatory narration. The emphasis is about equal between historic personalities and epic battles, both depicted with detachment and restraint, both almost bloodless by the standards of today. Confrontations are dignified, carnage is comparatively decorous. Toshiro Mifune and a debonair Tatsuya Nakadai stand out among a fine studio cast. Foreign actors playing Russians… well, less was expected of them. The unseen star is technical director Eiji Tsuburaya. At times you can all but smell the coal smoke from his model warships. The English subtitles are so flawed that they conclude with an apology. They’re still preferable to the English-language version incongruously dubbed by an American vocal cast.


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