Letters from Iwo Jima with Ken Watanabe: DVD Cover
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Letters from Iwo Jima
a.k.a. Red Sun, Black Sand Director: Clint Eastwood Cast: Ken Watanabe, Kazunari Ninomiya, Tsuyoshi Ihara, Ryo Kase

DVD - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 05/20/2008
  • Original Release: 2006
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 16,741

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Scenes

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Letters from Iwo Jima
1. We Soldiers Dig [5:09]
2. Kuribiyashi's Arrival [5:28]
3. Coordination for Real War [2:34]
4. Embarrassments [4:02]
5. Nishi's Honest Opinion [6:19]
6. Change in Strategy [3:47]
7. A Kempeitai Among Us [4:33]
8. Your Dad Will Come Home [5:59]
9. Until We Are Dead [3:05]
10. Enemy Bombs [6:01]
11. Address to the Troops [4:07]
12. Belts From Home [2:57]
13. Emptying the Pot [2:47]
14. Enemy Landing [3:19]
15. Life and Death Orders [4:02]
16. Die With Honor [4:47]
17. Inflamed [1:53]
18. Run for Motoyama [2:48]
19. At Sword's Point [3:09]
20. Who's in Charge Here? [5:32]
21. No Reinforcements [2:22]
22. Questioning Sam [4:01]
23. Shimizu's Disgrace [5:18]
24. Farewell Party [2:42]
25. Just a Letter [1:58]
26. Nishi's Farewell [6:48]
27. Surrender With Me [4:25]
28. Let This Be a Lesson [5:13]
29. You Look Familiar [3:15]
30. Song From the Homeland [4:32]
31. Final Attack [3:47]
32. Still Japan [6:18]
33. Rediscovered Voices; End Credits [7:10]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

After bringing the story of the American soldiers who fought in the battle of Iwo Jima to the screen in his film Flags of Our Fathers, Clint Eastwood offers an equally thoughtful portrait of the Japanese forces who held the island for 36 days in this military drama. In 1945, World War II was in its last stages, and U.S. forces were planning to take on the Japanese on a small island known as Iwo Jima. While the island was mostly rock and volcanoes, it was of key strategic value and Japan's leaders saw the island as the final opportunity to prevent an Allied invasion. Lt. General Tadamichi Kuribayashi (Ken Watanabe) was put in charge of the forces on Iwo Jima; Kuribayashi had spent time in the United States and was not eager to take on the American army, but he also understood his opponents in a way his superiors did not, and devised an unusual strategy of digging tunnels and deep foxholes that allowed his troops a tactical advantage over the invading soldiers. While Kuribayashi's strategy alienated some older officers, it impressed Baron Nishi (Tsuyoshi Ihara), the son of a wealthy family who had also studied America firsthand as an athlete at the 1932 Olympics. As Kuribayashi and his men dig in for a battle they are not certain they can win -- and most have been told they will not survive -- their story is told both by watching their actions and through the letters they write home to their loved ones, letters that in many cases would not be delivered until long after they were dead. Among the soldiers manning Japan's last line of defense are Saigo (Kazunari Ninomiya), a baker sent to Iwo Jima only days before his wife was to give birth; Shimizu (Ryo Kase), who was sent to Iwo Jima after washing out in the military police; and Lieutenant Ito (Shidou Nakamura), who has embraced the notion of "Death Before Surrender" with particular ferocity. Filmed in Japanese with a primarily Japanese cast, Letters From Iwo Jima was shot in tandem with Flags of Our Fathers, and the two films were released within two months of one another. Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Customer Reviews

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Another Eastwood Successby Anonymous

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July 04, 2008: This movie is one of the greatest films directed by Mr. Eastwood. I highly reccomend this movie to those who have already seen "Flags of our Fathers".

This review was written about the DVD Special Edition / Wide Screen edition.

Memorial Dayby Anonymous

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May 28, 2007: Decoration Day or Memorial Day as it is now called is a day set aside to honor those who fought in all of the wars since the Civil War, wars in defense of country and citizens. While we languish over the misbegotten war on Iraq it is helpful to view the Clint Eastwood film LETTERS FROM IWO JIMA and visit the mindset of the 'enemy' - the soldiers pointing weapons our way - in an attempt to understand the global effect of war on the battlefield. Eastwood wisely pairs his disappointing 'Flags of our Fathers', which addressed the political 'war games' simultaneously with the combat on a small Japanese island in World War II, with a 'look at the other side' viewpoint. The same type of militarism, blind faith in the war machine, brutality, fear of dying, bonding among friends, the spectrum of 'good officers versus cruel inflexible officers, and the spectrum of humanity is equalized and the result is a moving drama that sheds needed light on how 'war' is a universal beast no matter one's stance. The telling of the story with occasional letter contents is sound if somewhat over long. The screenplay by Iris Yamashita and Paul Haggis is based on Tadamichi Kuribayashi's "Picture Letters from Commander in Chief" - Kuribayashi (Ken Watanabe) being the film's chief character. Watanabe is excellent in his well-rounded approach to the role of the 'good commander' in both his wise military judgment and his kindness bestowed on the simplest of soldiers such as Saigo (the sensitive Kazunari Ninomiya). For many of us this is the first encounter with the vantage that the Japanese were minimally supplied and supported in defending their sacred Iwo Jima against the American aggressors: the battle was a doomed last stand for the Japanese despite all the casualties suffered by both sides. Eastwood does away with the 'kamikazi' stereotype of the Japanese soldier and allows us to see them as human beings, away form home, fighting to defend their country and their honor. No one is right in war: circumstances and places vary from Europe, the Far East, the Middle East and here but horrors remain the same. It is good to be reminded of this, as in LETTERS FROM IWO JIMA, especially on Memorial Day. Grady Harp

This review was written about the DVD Special Edition / Wide Screen edition.