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    Best Wishes For Tomorrow (2007)

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    Best Wishes For Tomorrow
    istory goes to court in Best Wishes for Tomorrow, a Japanese fact-based drama from director Takashi Koizumi. Once an assistant director for Akira Kurosawa, Koizumi only dared to take on the film's subject matter after his previous film The Professor and His Beloved Equation became a minor hit in Japanese theaters. Co-written by Koizumi and foreign author/playwright Roger Pulvers (presumably chosen for the significant amount of English dialogue), the film recreates the war criminal trial of Japanese Lieutenant General Tasuku Okada using transcripts from the actual trial. The result is a film that has a compelling backstory and interesting themes, even though they don't translate effectively into cinematic terms. After the Japanese defeat in World War II, Lt. Gen. Okada and other captured Japanese military officials were put on trial for war crimes. Okada and his subordinates went on trial in Yokohama for ordering the execution of captured American fliers after only abridged trials. The fliers carried out discriminate bombings that targeted only civilians - the crux of Okada's judgement of the fliers as war criminals, and the rationale for their execution. Okada is the only one who goes on trial; he's apparently such a model officer that he takes on full responsibility for his actions in order to save his men's lives, plus he even gives them massage treatments while in prison. Despite the dense background, Pulvers and Koizumi show only Okada's trial and its aftermath, with no flashbacks to the war, and only Yutaka Takenouchi's narration connecting the rest of the dots. In fact, the film is so focused on Okada's trial that the full names of characters other than Okada are never revealed. Compared to other recent Japanese World War II films such as For Those We Love and Yamato, Best Wishes for Tomorrow can certainly be considered more thoughtful and cerebral. For one, the opening narration points out that Japan also carried out indiscriminate bombings during the war that caused civilian deaths in China. However, that point is never brought up again, as the film becomes an overly sentimental (cynics may even say wishy-washy) portrayal of a man who ordered the beheadings of 38 men. In an attempt to escape accusations of being hypocritical, Koizumi and Pulvers paint Okada in an honorable and positive light while also delivering a "Can't we all just get along?" message that lets both the Japanese and American armies off easy. It is that portrayal that is both the strength and weakness of the film's ideology. Although the writers manage to keep the portrayals as balanced as possible, the film's neutrality - established often in the film's more dramatic (and fictional) moments - appears contrived.

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    • Takashi Koizumi
    • Drama
    • 0

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    IMDb Wertung:
    7.4 / 10 :: 35 Votes
    Genre: Drama
    Roman: Shohei Ooka
    Produzent: Masato Hara
    Schauspieler: Makoto Fujita  Robert Lesser  Fred Spiker  Richard Neil  Sumiko Fuji  Masahiko Nishimura  Yû Aoi  Yoshiko Tanaka  11 weitere
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