Cheap Letters from Iwo Jima (Two-Disc Special Edition) (DVD) (Clint Eastwood) Price
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On the DVDs
Like the film itself, the two-disc special edition of Letters from Iwo Jima is predominantly Japanese in content, and that's as it should be. Disc 1 presents the film in a flawless widescreen transfer, with a Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround soundtrack that perfectly captures the film's wide dynamic range. The optional subtitles can be turned off for those wishing to immerse themselves in a completely Japanese viewing experience. Disc 2 opens with "Red Sun, Black Sand: The Making of Letters from Iwo Jima," a 20-minute behind-the-scenes documentary that concisely covers all aspects of production, from director Clint Eastwood's initial decision to create a companion piece to Flags of Our Fathers, to interview comments from principal cast and crew, the latter including Flags screenwriters Paul Haggis and Letters screenwriter Iris Yamashita, costume designer Deborah Hopper, editor Joel Cox, cinematographer Tom Stern, production designer James Murakami (taking over for the ailing Henry Bumstead), and coproducer Rob Lorenz. "The Faces of Combat" is an 18-minute featurette about selecting the Japanese (and Japanese-American) cast of Letters, and how they were chosen through the international collaboration of Eastwood's long-time casting director Phyllis Huffman (who turned over some of her duties to her son while struggling with terminal illness) and Japanese casting associate Yumi Takada, who filled important roles with Japanese celebrities (like pop star Kazunari Ninomiya, who plays "Saigo") and unknown actors alike.
"Images from the Frontlines" is a 3.5-minute montage of images from the film and behind-the-scenes, set to the sparse piano theme of Eastwood's original score. The remaining bonus features chronicle the world premiere of Letters in Tokyo on November 15, 2006. The premiere itself is covered in a 16-minute featurette taped at the famous Budokan arena, where we see the red-carpet procession, a full-capacity audience despite cold November weather, and introductory comments from the film's primary cast and crew, many of them quite moving with regard to the satisfaction of working on a film that helps Japanese viewers come to terms with a painful chapter of their history. The following day's press conference (at the Grand Hyatt Tokyo hotel) is a 24-minute Q&A session covering much of the same territory, with additional testimony from principal cast & crew. Throughout this two-day event, it's clear that Eastwood (referring to himself as "a Japanese director who doesn't speak the Japanese language") was warmly embraced by the Japanese, and that Letters from Iwo Jima had served its intended purpose, reminding us of the horrors of war while uniting both Japanese and Americans in somber reflection, 61 years after the battle of Iwo Jima. --Jeff Shannon
| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| DIRECTOR: | Clint Eastwood |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 12 January, 2007 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Warner Home Video |
| MPAA RATING: | R (Restricted) |
| FEATURES: | Widescreen, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Adult Language, Adult Situations, Anti-War Film, Claustrophobic, Color, Combat Films, Drama, Earnest, English, Feature, Feature Film Action Adventure, Foreign Film - Japanese, Graphic Violence, Great Battles, Heroic Mission, Intimate, Japanese, Meditative, Movie, Trapped or Confined |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 2 |
| UPC: | 085391112921 |
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Customer Reviews of Letters from Iwo Jima (Two-Disc Special Edition)
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What Flags of Our Fathers should have been, but was not!
I couldn't help feeling a big letdown when I watched Clint Eastwood's "Flags", after seeing this picture. I had have expected to view this movie as more of a documentary, with lots of comments from ex-WWII Japanese vets. I was pleasantly surprised when it presented the action, and drama of soldiers who know they have lost. I was expecting to see the drama and carnage of the battle in Flags, and not a study is dissolution for those who were in the famous "planting the flag" picture.
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>Iwo Jima was a hard fought battle with tremendous losses on both sides. The Japanese chose to give up the beaches, and defend from the high ground. When the flag was planted, most thought the worst was over, but many times more casualties were realized after the big flag planting ceremony. That's the story that was begging to be told. If the story in "Flags" was merely to convey the hypocrisy of the political war propaganda machine and its human price, as least they could have established that on the home front. The movie "Letters..." handled that kind of conveying of emotion, almost seamlessly.
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>Motivations were better on display as well, the differing thoughts on saving face in a lost battle. That it was better to die by one's own hand, or in a suicide charge rather than give yourself up to ones enemy. One thing they really didn't capture was the mindset of the Japanese soldier, that American's were inferior as a race. The attitude was touched on briefly in some of the Japanese dog soldier's conversation, but overall it was not apparent. One thing they did do well, was put a human face on the act of war. The soldiers who would have preferred the war be over, were just trying to survive their time. Their wants and desires were depicted as essentially the same as most of us.
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>It was also not that much on display here, the brutality that has been attributed to the Japanese in battle. Perhaps that's a behavior on display only when they win, but more likely it's a function of the leadership. If the leaders have no respect for those which they conquer, their men can act with retribution, revenge and hatred. In this story, some of the Japanese leaders had empathy for both their men, and even for America in some ways as the leader had spent time there and had American friends. That made it difficult to think of them as sub-human.
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Nice effort by Mr. Eastwood
Though slow at times, this movie is sure to be a classic. Better at second viewing.