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8/10
A sympathetic look at suicide bombers...no wait, come back...
ExpendableMan29 July 2015
Despite being one of the better films hiding among the titles on Netflix, 'The Eternal Zero' doesn't seem to have attracted much attention in the west. Given that it's a film that casts a sympathetic look at Japan's kamikaze pilots though that's not exactly surprising. It's already been subject to a wealth of controversy by critics in Japan and abroad, especially as there's one pivotal scene that compares them (favourably) to modern day suicide bombers.

This is a shame because at it's heart, 'The Eternal Zero' is a defiantly anti-war movie and a genuinely moving one. Beginning at a funeral, it focuses on siblings Kentaro and Keiko Oishi and their quest to find out more about the Grandfather they never knew. They soon discover that their relative Kyuzo Miyabe was a fighter pilot that died in a kamikaze attack on an aircraft carrier but throughout the war, he was almost universally hated by his fellow pilots. They meet with several veterans who all accuse Miyabe of cowardice for avoiding combat at any cost and after being shouted at by several angry old men, are understandably keen to throw in the towel. Then they decide to go for one last interview and things start to get more complex.

From there, the film unfolds Citizen Kane-style through interviews and flashbacks. It turns out Oishi was in truth a brilliant pilot, but one who also desperately wanted to live and return home to his wife. This made him thoroughly unpopular in a culture which at the time venerated the honourable sacrifice, but it also makes him something of a cypher character. Nobody in their right mind would want to smash themselves into a warship in a burning jet plane after all, so how does someone come to be persuaded to do that? And could it happen to any of us or was it something that only Imperial Japan could convince it's people to do?

What follows is a moving story of courage disguised as cowardice and a man who firmly believed in life at all cost rather than pointless deaths. There's a few brilliant scenes where characters juggle certain death against uncertain life, not least where Oishi convinces a fellow pilot not to turn back for a suicide run, only to wind up suffering an even worse fate because of it.

On a technical level too the film does a great job in recreating aerial combat through CGI (a practical necessity given the lack of functioning Zeros nowadays). The focus isn't on the combat though and anyone expecting constant dogfights will be disappointed. The Battle of Midway scene for example ends all too soon and often, we see the aftermath of battle rather than the battle itself. It makes up for it though in the human drama and when Oishi finds himself flying escort to his own students and has to watch them squander their lives pointlessly, it's both visually impressive and moving.

Anyone who still harbours resentment for the Japanese and their actions during WW2 however will still hate this movie. There's no mention of the atrocities of Nanking or the mistreatment of POWs for example, but then they're not the focus of the film. This is about impressionable young men being brainwashed into throwing their lives away and their ancestors struggling to come to terms with it. In that sense, Kentaro and Keiko are representative of modern Japan itself; they don't have to approve of their own history in order to sympathise with it. This is a great film, but it'll provoke a heated argument or two, a fact which it foreshadows in a night out that goes disastrously wrong.
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7/10
of war, family, and sacrifice
LunarPoise23 April 2015
A brother and sister initiate a personal project to find out more about their grandfather, a World War II kamikaze pilot. When they discover their grandfather was universally regarded as a coward, their enthusiasm begins to wane. But the brother persists, discovering there is more to the story.

This is a subtle film, foregrounding the personal consequences of war for rounded, authentic characters. In the process, the film astutely stays away from either justifying or apologising for Japan's war actions. Jun'ichi Okada is a revelation as the pilot instructor who attempts to save his young charges from the excesses of his superiors, often at great personal sacrifice. He makes a promise to his wife, but then seems to compromise it in order to be loyal to his men. The resolution of this conflict makes for a powerful and well-plotted storyline.

The flashbacks to the war are engaging and dramatic, but the film's weak point is the bland Haruma Miura guiding us through the story. In a scene conspicuous for its shallow clunkiness, he berates his friends for equating tokkutai with modern-day suicide bombers. No real camaraderie seems to exist between the friends, and the whole scene seems designed merely to relay the point that modern-day fanaticism and historical Japanese 'heroism' cannot be equated. It is a fop to present-day rightist revisionism that is unworthy of the rest of the film.

Eien no Zero shows ordinary people living extraordinary lives in extraordinary circumstances. A thoughtful, emotional film that, casting flaws aside, proves cathartic and thought-provoking in equal measure.
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8/10
No matter why or who you fight, the fighters are proud of their victories and devastated by their defeats.
steveo12227 March 2018
Outstanding. Epic. Straight to the upper echelons of my all time greatest war movies list. I had never heard of it until I recently read a list of films with the best flying sequences and the air battle scenes are riveting. Caveat: if you don't like CGI, you won't like this. It's 2013 CGI, not flawless, but the sequences are so ambitious and well planned that if it had been put together by the people who did "Dunkirk" it would be one of the greatest war movies made. (It's on my list, but that's my list.) And that includes the predominant very well written, emotionally satisfying drama plot that atones for any nit-picky production flaws. "The Eternal Zero has come under criticism for its nationalistic and sympathetic depiction of the Kamikaze pilots." Oh, STFU. There is nothing 'glorious' about it and if you can watch something like this without sympathy... No matter why or who you fight, the fighters are proud of their victories and devastated by their defeats. I've certainly never seen a better 'Japanese side of things' film.
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7/10
A Surprise Gem
aarakis8 November 2015
Warning: Spoilers
We heard it all before: enemies are people too who have families to which they long to return. But rarely do we see the protagonist change his mind about going home at the last moment. Love, sacrifice, promises, priorities, obligations, guilt, consequences. How important are these things at time of war? Less? Or more? Which takes precedence? Why? And who's to say? 60 years after the war is probably a good time to ask these questions. Not ancient enough that everyone that was there are dead and not recent enough that it still hurts (badly).

The dinner conversation that ended abruptly with the diners comparing Kamikaze pilots and modern-day suicide bombers was a particularly good call by the filmmakers.
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9/10
One of the Best Japanese Films
pinokiyo12 April 2017
I would put this in one of my top favorite films. It's as good as "Letters from Iwo Jima"

Was the lives worth it for the future of Japan?

It's kind of like "The Notebook" meets "Pearl Harbor". (well, better than those two films!) If you had to choose love between your own family and country/men; many had to face the same dilemma. People can have different perspective whether one is a coward or a real hero.

I'm not sure how I missed this film when it first came out, but I recently watched it and I was engaged throughout the whole film.

The director Takashi Yamazaki also makes really large scale Hollywood-like production quality.

There's many war films out there, but this one is actually refreshing and meaningful. It really hits hard on the impact and value of life - how precious it really is.

I really liked how it brought up the controversy/showed and compared how people/kids of modern Japan also judged the way they saw the kamikaze pilots who fought for them. Some people argue they were just crazy brainwashed terrorists, but not everything is just simply black and white.

The film stars Juichi Okada, a famous former Japenese boy band group member called V6, who plays the main pilot. I was surprised he could act so well, as he was amazing in the film.

I liked how the film had that small subtle connection/twist of the old man with the security cameras in his home/samurai sword; you'd only get it if you were paying attention.

I highly recommend this film. It's definitely one of the quality war films made.
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6/10
WWII from an Japanese point of view - original but flawed
johnpierrepatrick15 April 2020
That movie is aimed in all purpose to its fellow japanese audience. It tells one part of his dark history, but with the tale of a hero of light, that advocates values opposed to the one in place at that time in the army. It speaks about the famous Zero planes, a technical and technological wonder that still is a pride for many. Finally, family, traditions and loyalty are pillars of this movie as well as of Japanese culture.

If it is indeed interesting in its subject, it was too much made to be a hit and gathering of the success elements to achieve a good movie. Quite (too) long, it has some unnecessay complex plot twists and tries to much to appeal to emotion. It should have played on its strenght : a real hero, but considered as a coward in that army and the inner contradiction of such a situation. The Zero story and what lead Japan to choose kamikaze operation during the war.

I'll still go with a 6/10 for its unusual treatment of WWII.
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10/10
Simply excellent.
argento10031 December 2014
Deeply touching story, amazing acting, excellent FX and war recreations. The most important is the human perspective, the individuals outside the wrong or right of the history books. You will cry seeing this movie, and its fine. I do not agree with other reviewer about being a movie to "justify" Japan. Is a movie about persons, their lives and struggles in the most horrible point of human history and human nature. I took this movie, as many other war movies, as a message to the people so they understand this is the horror of war and how it affects people like you, this would happen to you or your people, this is what happened, happens and will happen. Outside the big story of battles, strategy, the macro history, the little stories of the persons, no matters which side. I'll save this movie next to Letters from Iwo Jima and Ünsere Mutter, Ünsere Vätter.
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novel is always a novel, movie always a movie
MovieIQTest3 November 2014
when a movie is adapted from a novel, there are things when you read the novel, some of the impossible and highly unlikely storyline and dialog written by the author, might not consciously spot by the reader the impossibilities unlikely to be heard or seen by any third party in the novel about some dialog that only delivered between two other persons. yet in this film, or in that novel, when the husband suddenly came back to see his wife and his baby daughter, what he said to his wife before returning to his battle station, such as, "i'll be back, even i died, i'll be back to you and to our daughter..." blah, blah and blah, well, those words are absolutely impossible to be heard by the third person, but this impossible crap just happened in this film, thus made the film suddenly became so ridiculously unbelievable.

this film just telling from the side and in the eyes of the Japanese and their survivors from the WWII and somehow was trying to tell their post second world Japanese new generations a subtly twisted around story from their cruelty and their heartless attacks, their barbarous acts, the widely spread animal-like atrocity to America and to most part of the Asian countries like China, Korea and most south east Asian countries.

this film also got a hidden agenda for the purpose of self-justifying for what they did to their own people and in the meantime, trying so subtly to gain some sympathy from those countries and their people suffered during the invasions of the Japanese military forces. this is a self-indulgent, self-righteous and self-justified one-sided story, only emphasizing the very little part or even just one Japanese pilot whose goal is to survive the war and return to his family, but never allow the Japanese audience to have the least opportunity to know the other side and the other part of what their Japanese military forces, in the air or on the ground, did to the mankind during that time.

the Japanese people have to know one thing: why the American never used atomic bombs on the 3rd Reich motherland but on their island nation. the 'WHY' actually is more important to be told in this self-indulgent tear-jerking Japanese fictitious story.

to me, this is a very pretentious and untruthful movie that only tried to win some empathy from their own people and nothing more.

it is also clear that the author of this novel has used the plotting technique from the movie 'Rushomon': so many different people tried to explain one happenstance from so many different angles, yet there was no possible way whatsoever to determine which one was actually the ultimate truth.

a reader of a novel as well as a viewer of a movie should at least use their brains and their basic logic and/or common senses in order not to be so easily manipulated by the storyline.
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7/10
It was a nice Japanese propaganda movie
baristonak12 January 2017
Warning: Spoilers
The perspective of this movie can change by different people. For a Japan it is a story of hero, but for an American it is a propaganda movie. I think it is a nice Japan propaganda movie. This movie is showing us even today's Japan Kamikaze pilots and soldiers which fight in WW2 are excluded, because for some young Japans Kamikaze pilots are ultra-nationalist psychopaths and there is no difference between suicide bombers and Kamikaze pilots. But this movie is arguing every Kamikaze pilot is not ultra-nationalist psychopaths, there are some dramatic stories of Kamikaze pilots. Miyabe sacrificed himself, because he became very sad on death of young Kamikaze pilots and he wanted to cover a young soldier, in this way he died as a hero, but no one knows it. So it is a nice movie for showed us this story, because there are some real untold stories like in this movie. Also I liked structure of movie that deeply examine of characters and present different kind of perspective. So I think this movie is a successful movie. But I have some unanswered questions and I found some deficiencies about movie. For example, why soldiers called Miyabe as coward? I think scriptwriter wanted to show he decided to die, because death is an escape hatch, and he could not face with sadness of war and he decided to suicide, so they could called him as a coward. Also Why Miyabe saddened too much about death of kamikaze pilots? I think he knows kamikaze pilots be kamikaze pilots for death. Also movie stayed on only character level, I think it should have more entered into war and also should have showed real face of Imperial Japan. For example why they attacked Pearl Harbour, if I did not know about what happened in pearl harbour and why Japan attacked the US, I could not understand why they are fighting each other. So if they were entered more into war, movie would be better. I was expecting to see more war scenes. Although they dramatic story and atmosphere of movie have covered these deficiencies. Also movie continued too long, if it has been ended after Kentero's and his sister's learned the truth, it could be more effective.
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9/10
one of the best movies i have seen in 2013
OpinionGuy10 January 2015
The Eternal Zero, just had it all, it is masterfully executed. The visual effects during the combat scenes are pretty spectacular. It's deeply touching story and amazing acting.

It's about time we see things from the Japanese perspective when it comes to the WW2. I'm tired of all the americanfied WW2 movies. Nothing beat the Japanese film making when it comes to dramas they make, they are simply the best at it. This movie is no exceptions and will leave you the viewer with heavy emotions and a lasting impression. It is simply Japanese film making at it's best.

I can highly recommend this movie, to anyone that is interested in Japanese drama. Specific to war movies buffs that want to see how it was on the other side.
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10/10
Greatest movie ever
kimNON18 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I have no movies which I shed tears so much with an impression ever. This movie is one of my best movies. I was overwhelmed the large-scale. In the movie, I felt like riding the Zero.

The story begins that Kentaro and her sister know the fast they have another grandfather with a blood relationship, Kyuzo Miyabe, who died in the WW2. They visit veterans of Miyabe to know who he was. A screen flash back from the present day to those days during WW2. Miyabe has a tenacious clinging to life. He is considered as a coward because everyone at that time thinks it is an honor that they die for their country. Miyabe always has consideration for his wife, daughter, comrade and following. I think he acts like that at the last scene because of the consideration.

This movie must be watched forever, especially for young age. We have to remember the tragedy of the war. Even during the war, I see there is a beautiful love.
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1/10
Cheering for the enemy
Vinny374 January 2017
A very interesting film, interposing current with WW2 scenes, Kentaro, a grandson (simplified) researching his biological grandfather (Miyabe) who flew as a Kamikaze yet some had branded a coward. The twists become more complex, as a complex life is drawn, and a number who had known Miyabe, even a converted enemy, lived to fight for him after the war. I found it heart warming, until (about 2hr, 16min in), a US naval officer showed just how dishonourable the US side apparently was by screaming the F-word – that's the only place such shame comes into the film. A bitter taste after the film ended. I would not have watched (nor would again) had I had the head's up beforehand, and grade it as close to a zero as the IMDb allows. I cannot recommend that nihilism, though the film otherwise was exemplary.
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9/10
Human drama
florennakajima3 March 2015
I love Eternal Zero. I watched it twice, and I still think this movie is great.

As I'm watching it, I thought about what really makes this movie interesting for me. Is it the wonderful drama, the exciting dogfights, or the personal point of view from those war pilots? The answer: all of it. I respect war veterans, because having gone into war at a fairly young age was one of the hardest duty, not to mention how risky and full of torture it was. A kind of duty no one should undertake, because ego and greed will only lead to human destruction.

Eternal Zero gives a different perspective of war. How the main character is in all conscience not willing to die for his country. An unexpected confession, seeing how common it was for survivors to have their brain washed, so they can be patriotic in all sense, fight until the very last breath to conquer the enemy, not to holding on for dear life so they can reunite with their beloved family at home. It was pretty touching to see.

I highly recommend it, because truthfully, Eternal Zero is about human, and a view about the importance of life.
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9/10
Refreshingly different portrayal of the enemy.....
kvisle-918283 March 2016
This is an involved and engaging love story using Japan's involvement in WW2 as a back drop. It starts and ends with I believe a replicated scene that was based on actual footage that I remember seeing when I studied the history of the Second World War in the Pacific.

There was nothing I didn't like about the film. I liked the characters, the plot and the CGI. Nothing overpowered any other part of the film.

It is a long film at nearly 2.5 hours but I found it totally engrossing.

A week after I saw it I watched it again with my daughter (who knows very little if anything of the Japanese involvement in WW2) and she enjoyed it also. She rated it 8/10

I found it to be a refreshingly different portrayal of the other side in that conflict.

Last Friday night a group of friends came around for dinner. During the meal I was asked if I had seen any good films lately. So after dinner we watched The Eternal Zero. Harry gave it 7/10, Vicky 8/10. If anyone else rates it then I will update this post.
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9/10
Touching movie that shows WW2 from Japan kamikaze pilots point of view
hottisotakupoju2 September 2014
Eien no Zero was a big thing in Japan, basically everywhere you went you saw a trailer or a commercial for it, people at movie theatres cried during the movie. From a gaijins point of view, it was a interesting war movie, that showed so-called Japanese spirit, that went way overboard during the war.

Before the movie I read the book so I knew what to expect and the movie was way better than I could have expected. Everything felt authentic, moments in modern days didin't feel too long or jarring. People next to me were crying during the movie and I can see why. People who are nowadays called "terrorists" or "cowardly suicide bombers" were people fighting for their country, for their ancestors and their future. most of them knew that they would die during the battles, but they had to continue or they would be traitors.

I really recommend this movie, If you are interested in Asian drama or war movies, this movie is for you.
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10/10
One of best war Movie which gives me something to think, make me emotional
akashrox-8065711 May 2019
Please watch this movie that's simply what I need to tell anyone who here to see the reviews, This is a story which really touch you and give a wonderful massage, this is not something what American made to show their war power and victories this story is all about love and dark side of war, I can guarantee this won't boring, war, Love, all flowing nicely throughout this movie and Writer did his best to give a wonderful message for everyone, about value of life, same time it's helps us to see how different we are man to man, and how hard to see and understand people and sometimes our judgements are wrong. I think this movie is one of best which I seen so far from 100s of movies.
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9/10
Very accurate historical details
tosico-864-7429017 February 2020
This movie was a big hit in Japan which is good because it is essentialy an anti war film. The military detail is outstanding, right down to camoflage changes to aircraft and ships throughout the war. The Impirial Japanese Navy did start the war th the best pilots and best plane (Mistubishi Zero) as quoted in the movie. A lot of Japanese pilots were already veterens of the war in Manchuria (China). In the long run as Admiral Yamamoto feared the US became unbeatable once their industrial and economic power ramped up. Without a doubt the fact the allies cracked the Japanese naval code contributed to the allied victory (at Midway especialy). The nuclear bombs and then the Soviet Union declaring war on Japan forced the Japanese surrender saving countless lives no doubt. As a side note, Japan and the Russians are technicaly still at war and have land claims against each other.
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8/10
Is he a hero? Is he not?
ryanmo-3517810 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
My wife just read and book and felt it's really good, and so we managed to watch this rather old movie (over 10 years already). It's about 2 adults to find if their grandfather was a war hero or not, as they heard he skipped the war at that time. They visited many soldiers, some said he was never hit but he also did not fire a bullets, while others thought he had the greatest flying and fighting skills. While finding more info, they found out he did not like to fight as he wanted to come back and see his families. However, he was forced to join the attack force and sacrificed himself ( where he changed his damaged plane to another young soldier, who later become the step grandfather). The movie was good in describing the change of the main character, where he is rather good looking and good in acting...
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10/10
The untold truth behind this dark era
hikarumitsui29 December 2022
Rather than an action/fighting war movie, this is focused on the human story part of the war. It was great movie and very moving. From my perspective, I believe this movie did not show disrespect towards the Americans and it does not show any self justification towards the Japanese. No Japanese feels self justification when it comes to WW2. This movie showed the crucial truth behind a country in war.

After the war, the Japanese have been taught to this day that because they started the war, it caused a massive boomerang damage towards their own country and people. The Japanese believes this should never be repeated and is told throughout the generations as well. This is represented by the two grandchildren's in this movie.

Back then, the Japanese citizens/soldiers could not disobey the Imperial/country and were basically brainwashed "Dying for the Imperial is an honor, being an kamikaze is a hero", which no soldiers believed at heart because no one wants to die flying into the enemy and burning to death. Throughout the war, the citizens/families back then had to convince themselves this belief to honor the soldiers courage of death, not the country's belief itself. But the main character, Miyabe, who wished to live through and be with his family was called a coward instead. His courage and sacrifice toward his colleagues was indeed heroic. (In the book, his attack was concluded as a "fail" because his bomb did not shoot and barely any damage was given to the American ship).

I hope people can watch this without any bias on war conflict, more so the story of a man and his family and friends.
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10/10
Outstanding modern historical drama.
condicote17 June 2021
Eien no Zero. (The Fighter Pilot).

A bit of a Schindlers List for Japanese cinema.

An outstanding attempt to tell a story about a fighter pilot who desperately fought to keep himself and his men alive when the orders were to do the exact opposite. Not a film I'd ever thought I would sit down to watch but I'm so glad I did. The will to survive and to make it home to loved ones despite the impossibility of a situation and their orders stands out here more than the dark context within this infamous era of history. Duty is to our loved ones and survival. Those who survive have a responsibly to keep living their lives to the fullest and keep the stories alive of those who have lost theirs. It's not shameful to want to keep going and want to see our friends and family again.

Very moving. This and Fukushima 50 are both excellent modern historical films with a strong moral message which are helpful to our human spirit in these times. I hope others can enjoy and gain something from these films.
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10/10
good ww2 movie
djmw-595395 January 2023
Iv watched alot of ww2 movies and this one was good. Its nice too see all sides of war. There is the trope of beautiful wife etc but it still has some good feels to it without being over done like pearl harbour an the love triangle. The action scenes a decent enough cgi wise. I thought it was cool to watch another perspective on things. Some scenes are a little slow and the movie is quite long but it is worth watching. The movie is quite good at drawing emotion. Better then alot of hollywood ww2 movies. If anything this would be the most emotional ww2 movie iv ever watched. Apart from grave of the fireflies. And im not sure why that is sadly. Maybe the japanese just tell storys better.
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9/10
Beautiful film...
mak_60031 March 2022
Have watched this a number of times over the years and never fails to enthral me - part war story, part love story it's a tale of an ace Japanese WW2 fighter pilot and his battle to stay alive long enough to see out the war and get back to his wife and child - told from the angle of his grandchildren who embark on a mission to find out about their grandfather by meeting with various other surviving fighter pilots who knew him. It's beautifully told, flitting back and forth in time, has great aerial and naval battle scenes, with excellent CGI, an emotive & rousing score and really excellent performances across the board, the lead being the standout. A must see film...
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8/10
The blueprint for Minus One
DanTheMan2150AD12 December 2023
Complicated and nuanced as equally as it is populist and compelling, Takashi Yamazaki's The Eternal Zero is way too cluttered to assign any form of accurate assessment and yet, this highly thought-provoking tale on redemption and legacy is highly worthy of your time. Yamazaki effortlessly weaves together an engaging, expressive, sometimes exciting yet often horrifying depiction of a disgraced kamikaze pilot's life, never glorifying the nightmarish situation and always remaining sombre. The great performances sell the otherwise muddled script while its aerial combat is staggeringly realised with Yamazaki's creative use of visual effects and kinetic camerawork. More solemn and graceful, emotional and tragic, than downright high-octane and death-crazed as depicted in some Western war films, The Eternal Zero is an enormously evocative film even though it stumbles upon its final approach with an exceptionally jarring and sappy epilogue that feels very out of place with this otherwise excellent film.
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