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IMDbPro

Eien no 0

  • 2013
  • 2h 24min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,3/10
3 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Jun'ichi Okada, Mao Inoue, and Haruma Miura in Eien no 0 (2013)
¿GuerraAcciónDramaMisterioRomance

Una joven y su hermano investigan la historia de su abuelo, que murió en la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Contactan con los hombres que volaban con él para saber quién era realmente.Una joven y su hermano investigan la historia de su abuelo, que murió en la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Contactan con los hombres que volaban con él para saber quién era realmente.Una joven y su hermano investigan la historia de su abuelo, que murió en la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Contactan con los hombres que volaban con él para saber quién era realmente.

  • Dirección
    • Takashi Yamazaki
  • Guión
    • Takashi Yamazaki
    • Tamio Hayashi
    • Naoki Hyakuta
  • Reparto principal
    • Jun'ichi Okada
    • Haruma Miura
    • Mao Inoue
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,3/10
    3 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Takashi Yamazaki
    • Guión
      • Takashi Yamazaki
      • Tamio Hayashi
      • Naoki Hyakuta
    • Reparto principal
      • Jun'ichi Okada
      • Haruma Miura
      • Mao Inoue
    • 25Reseñas de usuarios
    • 13Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 10 premios y 4 nominaciones en total

    Imágenes15

    Ver cartel
    Ver cartel
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    + 11
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    Reparto principal40

    Editar
    Jun'ichi Okada
    Jun'ichi Okada
    • Miyabe
    Haruma Miura
    Haruma Miura
    • Kentarô Saeki
    Mao Inoue
    • Matsuno
    Gaku Hamada
    Gaku Hamada
    • Isaki
    Hirofumi Arai
    Hirofumi Arai
    • Kageura
    Shôta Sometani
    Shôta Sometani
    • Oishi
    Takahiro Miura
    Takahiro Miura
    • Takeda
    Tatsuya Ueda
    • Koyama
    Ken Aoki
    • Ito
    Rakuto Tochihara
    • Teranishi
    Ippei Sasaki
    Yûya Endô
    Yûya Endô
    • Kagawa
    Takehiro Hira
    Takehiro Hira
    Tarô Suruga
    Toshihiro Yashiba
    Kisuke Iida
    Kisuke Iida
    Ryôhei Abe
    Akio Nakadai
    • Dirección
      • Takashi Yamazaki
    • Guión
      • Takashi Yamazaki
      • Tamio Hayashi
      • Naoki Hyakuta
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios25

    7,32.9K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    9kvisle-91828

    Refreshingly different portrayal of the enemy.....

    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.
    9florennakajima

    Human drama

    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.
    9pinokiyo

    One of the Best Japanese Films

    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.
    9hottisotakupoju

    Touching movie that shows WW2 from Japan kamikaze pilots point of view

    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.
    8ExpendableMan

    A sympathetic look at suicide bombers...no wait, come back...

    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.

    Más del estilo

    Arukimedesu no taisen
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    Korô no chi
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    Nihon no ichiban nagai hi ketteiban
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    Korô no chi: Level 2
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    6,8
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    From Siberia with Love
    6,8
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    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que...?

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    • Curiosidades
      Hayao Miyazaki, who criticized the film for "trying to make a Zero fighter story based on a fictional war account that is a pack of lies" had months before released El viento se levanta (2013), a film about the designer of the same aircraft depicted in this film.
    • Pifias
      The correct title is The Eternal Zero not The Fighter Pilot.
    • Citas

      US Navy Lookout: It's a Zero!

    • Conexiones
      Version of Eien no 0 (2015)
    • Banda sonora
      Hotaru
      Written by Keisuke Kuwata

      Performed by 'Sazan Ôru Sutâzu'

      Courtesy of Taishita Label Music/Victor Entertainment

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    Preguntas frecuentes16

    • How long is The Fighter Pilot?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 21 de diciembre de 2013 (Japón)
    • País de origen
      • Japón
    • Sitios oficiales
      • Hong Kong Official Site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Idioma
      • Japonés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • The Fighter Pilot
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Kagoshima, Japón
    • Empresas productoras
      • Toho
      • Amuse
      • Amuse Soft
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 82.879.386 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      • 2h 24min(144 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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