Tora! Tora! Tora! Comments

  • Aletha 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    40 minutes of play, paved the way for nearly 2 hours. The air combat in the back is very enjoyable....

  • Dee 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    The United States is looking for space, Japan is looking for face, and there is a war movie that everyone is happy...

  • Pattie 2022-03-27 09:01:15

    It really recorded the front and back of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. From the perspective of war, it is still rigorous, but from the perspective of movies, the viewing degree is relatively general, and it feels more boring as you go...

  • Melyna 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    Every detail of the attack on Pearl Harbor was laid out and explained very clearly. Yamamoto Fifty-six's single-handedly planned sneak attack finally succeeded and destroyed Pearl Harbor, but he finally said worriedly: Next, we have to face the most powerful...

  • Maria 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    Only now did I understand what was going on in the attack on Pearl Harbor. . . No wonder I always fail history. . . It's not clear in the book. ....

  • Mason 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    # Archive# When I was in elementary school, I saw the clip and always thought it was a documentary; in the Mandarin dubbed version, the American soldier laughed when he called the Japanese devil; although the dust has settled, is this film really a self-defeating work? (Although there is also a conspiracy theory that Roosevelt wanted to intervene in World War II and use Pearl Harbor as cannon fodder) I deeply chasing chickens for the unscrupulous and mindless military style of the Yankees! The...

  • Liliane 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    It shows history from a very objective perspective, without too much ideology. It is basically a parallel narrative, and the editing points are designed with more care. The director still wants to make the narrative smoother, after all, the film is too long. There are many characters on the stage, but they are basically passers-by except Yamamoto Yamamoto of Satoshi...

  • Gladyce 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    Little Japan can actually be photographed so...

  • Hollie 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    The last person who watched this movie is estimated to have been with me for a long time, the classic old movies of World War II, Pearl Harbor, American...

  • Kamryn 2022-03-26 09:01:10

    They tried their best to understand each other and achieve restoration, and the depiction of both parties was beyond expectations. It is definitely a precious cultural exchange...

Extended Reading
  • Clementine 2022-01-11 08:02:28

    A panoramic view of the classics of historical events

    Today is the 69th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor. Hawaii time is 18 hours later than Beijing time, so it is still the "longest day" 69 years ago.
        I don’t know when it started, war movies, or epic war movies, have basically disappeared from the screen, replaced by the entire war from...

  • Keenan 2022-03-25 09:01:15

    Japan-US co-production, Akira Kurosawa and Shinji Fukasaku are both here!

    1. It's so well made. Akira Kurosawa screenwriter, director Shinji Fukasaku, and of course American directors, at least in the film industry, the United States and Japan can have such productions nearly 30 years after the war. Throughout the film, the shots of the Japanese military are very clean,...

Tora! Tora! Tora! quotes

  • [a bullet smashes through the window of Kimmel's office and hits him in the chest, but only tears his uniform before falling to the floor. Commander Curts picks it up]

    Commander Maurice E. Curts: It's spent, sir.

    [Kimmel stares at the bullet]

    Admiral Husband E. Kimmel: [somberly] Would've been merciful had it killed me.

  • Lt. Colonel Rufus S. Bratton: [rushing in with a message warning about a possible attack] Ed, here's a message; I need this typed up immediately!

    Colonel Edward F. French: [in no hurry whatsoever] R-i-ight.

    [he studies the paper]

    Colonel Edward F. French: Umm... the General's handwriting - hard to read. You're going to have to help me out with this, Rufus.

    [looking nervously at French, Bratton takes the paper from French and sits down at a typewriter, rolling paper in as if to begin typing the handwritten message]