AKA Hawai Mare Okikaisen
Received an award for visual effects from the Japan Motion Picture Cinematographers Association.
Eiji Tsubaraya was predominantly known in the west for the visual effects of the Japanese giant monster pictures or Kaiju starting with Godzilla in 1954. Not so commonly known , having mostly only been seen in Japan, is his contribution to a series of war pictures. This, one of the earliest, depicts the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor as well as a few other Japanese imperial navy victories between 1941 and 1942. Using Naval aerial photographs the effects team built an accurate large expanse of miniature set, outdoors, with buildings, hangars, moving trucks, vehicles and attacking aircraft as well as many American warship models. They then proceeded to destroy the whole lot by blowing it up in shot after shot.
There is a legend that the American occupying forces took the miniature work for real and in fact they believed Tsubaraya must have been part of a spy network to have access to such accurate information. Compared to real footage of the Pearl Harbor attack it doesn't really hold up but there are a number of particularly effective shots. The camera is often shooting from the point of view of an aircraft in flight and the motion is really well simulated and quite convincing. Some of the buildings being blown up also fracture and collapse really well. The explosions in the water are less successful as they give away the scale of the ships and water too easily.
Thanks are due to Roger Todd for alerting me to this film, for his research and providing the visual material for this post.
Source: Eiji Tsubaraya: Master of Monsters by August Ragone published by Chronicle Books.
Showing posts with label Pearl Harbor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pearl Harbor. Show all posts
Thursday, 22 October 2015
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Most Popular posts in the last 7 days
-
Tora Tora Tora stands out as a prime example of the art of model ships in the cinema due largely to the scale of the the work undertaken and...
-
This is part 1 Part 2 is here , Part 3 is here , Part 4 is here and Part 5 is here . In my view, one of the great model ship movies of th...
-
Swiss Family Robinson was one of the all time classic family films produced by Disney. I saw it as a child on a re-release in the cinema. I...
-
This Cohen brothers adaption of a well loved 1955 Ealing comedy has a series of shots of a miniature tugboat and garbage barges composited ...
-
A movie musical variety show that features a race between two ocean liners, the Colossal and the Gigantic both represented in the film by mi...
-
Among its many spectacular sequences Ben Hur showcases a colourful naval battle against the Romans and the Macedonians staged by A Arnold ...


















































































































































