Letters From Iwo Jima

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Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
89
Universal Acclaim
out of 100
'Iwo Jima' a Superb Follow-Up
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

"I don't want to die for nothing," says a Japanese soldier toward the end of "Letters From Iwo Jima," Clint Eastwood's remarkable Japanese-language companion piece to his English-language 2006 Iwo Jima drama, "Flags of Our Fathers."

Clearly reaching the end of his tether, the man is running out of reasons to be fighting American forces to the death on a barren Pacific island. When a wounded U.S. prisoner turns out to be vulnerably human, undermining the Japanese government's insistence that American soldiers are savage fools, a stereotype is quietly shattered.

It's a deeply humanizing moment in a film that turns out to be considerably less grim than its subject. For each shocking or despairing moment, Iris Yamashita's screenplay (partly the work of Paul Haggis) comes through with an insight that rewards your patience.

Often it seems that testosterone and/or blind patriotism are the chief motivators for the soldiers, who don't want to be thought of as weak or disloyal to the emperor. At one point it's suggested that the ultimate sacrifice is justified if the safety of one child is guaranteed for just one day.

A cruel echo of this idea quickly arrives on the radio, as soldiers listen to Japanese children innocently belting out a propaganda song. Knowing that they're outnumbered, that they've recently suffered an overwhelming naval defeat and no reinforcements are on the way, the men react to the voices with a mixture of sour pride and revulsion.

Yamashita focuses on four men. Kuribayashi (Ken Watanabe) is a smart general who halts the digging of beach trenches in order to create a series of tunnels that slow down the American invasion in February-March 1945. Saigo (Kazunari Ninomiya), a lively baker, hopes to return home to see his daughter. Nishi (Tsuyoshi Ihara), a celebrity athlete, once hobnobbed with famous Americans. Shimizu (Ryo Kase) ended up on this suicide mission because he refused to follow orders.

Each character has a back story that reveals something essential, and Eastwood gives the actors plenty of opportunities to flesh out the flashbacks. Ninomiya, a Japanese pop star, is the most charismatic; Saigo's memories of his wife and the cruelties that led to his recruitment are especially touching.

Watanabe (an Oscar nominee for "The Last Samurai") brings a commanding intelligence to a complex role. Ihara has an appropriately aristocratic air, while Kase is instantly sympathetic as a soldier who gets into trouble because he isn't brutal enough.

Some of the men choose to blow themselves up with grenades. Others wonder if they're digging their own graves in the trenches. One offers to save another's honor by executing him with a sword. A couple of soldiers surrender, only to be dispatched by an impatient American who does fulfill the "savage fool" stereotype.

There are no good choices for these men, just as there were none for the exploited, soon-forgotten American war heroes of "Flags of Our Fathers." But in these two films, they are united in their humanity.

More movies on MSNBC 

"I don't want to die for nothing," says a Japanese soldier toward the end of "Letters From Iwo Jima," Clint Eastwood's remarkable Japanese-language companion piece to his English-language 2006 Iwo Jima drama, "Flags of Our Fathers."

Clearly reaching the end of his tether, the man is running out of reasons to be fighting American forces to the death on a barren Pacific island. When a wounded U.S. prisoner turns out to be vulnerably human, undermining the Japanese government's insistence that American soldiers are savage fools, a stereotype is quietly shattered.

It's a deeply humanizing moment in a film that turns out to be considerably less grim than its subject. For each shocking or despairing moment, Iris Yamashita's screenplay (partly the work of Paul Haggis) comes through with an insight that rewards your patience.

Often it seems that testosterone and/or blind patriotism are the chief motivators for the soldiers, who don't want to be thought of as weak or disloyal to the emperor. At one point it's suggested that the ultimate sacrifice is justified if the safety of one child is guaranteed for just one day.

A cruel echo of this idea quickly arrives on the radio, as soldiers listen to Japanese children innocently belting out a propaganda song. Knowing that they're outnumbered, that they've recently suffered an overwhelming naval defeat and no reinforcements are on the way, the men react to the voices with a mixture of sour pride and revulsion.

Yamashita focuses on four men. Kuribayashi (Ken Watanabe) is a smart general who halts the digging of beach trenches in order to create a series of tunnels that slow down the American invasion in February-March 1945. Saigo (Kazunari Ninomiya), a lively baker, hopes to return home to see his daughter. Nishi (Tsuyoshi Ihara), a celebrity athlete, once hobnobbed with famous Americans. Shimizu (Ryo Kase) ended up on this suicide mission because he refused to follow orders.

Each character has a back story that reveals something essential, and Eastwood gives the actors plenty of opportunities to flesh out the flashbacks. Ninomiya, a Japanese pop star, is the most charismatic; Saigo's memories of his wife and the cruelties that led to his recruitment are especially touching.

Watanabe (an Oscar nominee for "The Last Samurai") brings a commanding intelligence to a complex role. Ihara has an appropriately aristocratic air, while Kase is instantly sympathetic as a soldier who gets into trouble because he isn't brutal enough.

Some of the men choose to blow themselves up with grenades. Others wonder if they're digging their own graves in the trenches. One offers to save another's honor by executing him with a sword. A couple of soldiers surrender, only to be dispatched by an impatient American who does fulfill the "savage fool" stereotype.

There are no good choices for these men, just as there were none for the exploited, soon-forgotten American war heroes of "Flags of Our Fathers." But in these two films, they are united in their humanity.

More movies on MSNBC 

100
USA Today: Claudia Puig
It takes a filmmaker possessed of a rare, almost alchemic, blend of maturity, wisdom and artistic finesse to create such an intimate, moving and spare war film as Clint Eastwood has done in Letters From Iwo Jima.Read Full Review »
100
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
Letters From Iwo Jima, takes audiences to a place that would seem unimaginable for an American director. Daring and significant, it presents a picture from life's other side, not only showing what wartime was like for our Japanese adversaries on that island in the Pacific but also actually telling the story in their language. Which turns out to be no small thing.Read Full Review »
100
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
Eastwood's direction here is a thing of beauty, blending the ferocity of the classic films of Akira Kurosawa (Seven Samurai) with the delicacy and unblinking gaze of Yasujiro Ozu (Tokyo Story).Read Full Review »
100
Boston Globe: Ty Burr
Eloquent, bloody, and daringly simple.Read Full Review »
100
Philadelphia Inquirer: Steven Rea
One of the great war movies - or antiwar movies - of all time.Read Full Review »
100
The New York Times: A.O. Scott
A few scenes serve as hinges joining this movie to "Flags of Our Fathers." While Letters From Iwo Jima seems to me the more accomplished of the two films -- by which I mean that it strikes me as close to perfect -- the two enrich each other, and together achieve an extraordinary completeness.Read Full Review »
100
NewsWeek: David Ansen
It's unprecedented, a sorrowful and savagely beautiful elegy that can stand in the company of the greatest antiwar movies.Read Full Review »
100
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Lisa Schwarzbaum
Clint Eastwood's profound, magisterial, and gripping companion piece to his ambitious meditation on wartime image and reality, "Flags of Our Fathers."Read Full Review »
90
Time: Richard Corliss/Richard Schickel
Terse is the word for Eastwood's directorial style. It rarely editorializes; it doesn't emote or orate. It just tells the damn story of a soldier's honor, which means doing the job no matter the odds--indeed, no matter the mission.Read Full Review »
90
Village Voice: Scott Foundas
The special power of Eastwood's achievement is that, save for one indelible moment, the mutual recognition between sworn adversaries happens not on-screen, but later, as we piece the two films together in our minds.Read Full Review »
See all Letters From Iwo Jima reviews at metacritic.com »