Allright, I know this one is very obscure, and it's unlikely any of you will ever take the trouble to search it out, but I watched "Oba: The Last Samurai" last night at our local theater. It is a recent, Japanese-made World War 2 film, about Captain Sakai Oba, who led a band of 200 holdouts on the island of Saipan (where I live!) for a year and a half after the US invasion, and only surrendered when he received orders from a Japanese Imperial Army General, 4 months after the war was over.
Here is an actual photo of his surrender ceremony. Definitely one of my favorite pictures in WWII History:
Granted, I have a special interest in this film, because it is set in the place I have lived for the last 16 years, and in the jungles I have, by my own calculations, spent more time (cumulatively) than Captain Oba. So I won't blame you if you dismiss my recommendation on that basis. But, I really did think it was a very good war movie. It showed the war from an interesting perspective - that of the never-surrender Japanese - and was a very well done study of the concept of honor held so deeply by these men. Technically, it was a very well made film - almost up to the level of quality we would expect from a high-budget Hollywood film. It was filmed in Thailand, but distant scenery and setting shots were made on-location in Saipan, and many background shots have been painstakingly matte-painted to resemble World War 2 Saipan. The caves and jungle look identical to the terrain found on Saipan, and all the jungle scenes were utterly believable to me - which is saying a lot.
The action is excellent, and the story moves along and really involves you. The story starts with the actual battle itself, which culminated in a disastrous Banzai charge in which most of the surviving Japanese military were killed, and then moves into the longer part of the movie, following Oba as he regroups with military stragglers and civilians and attempts to hold out in the jungle.
Historically, from what I know of the story, it is fairly faithful to the battle of Saipan, and Oba's post-battle actions. Unfortunately, and typical for a Japanese production, it fails to honestly portray the brutality of the Japanese military, which Clint Eastwood did such an excellent job of documenting in "Letters from Iwo Jima". Although it is alluded to here and there, and there are a few characters who are obviously more violent than others, the film portrays a far chummier relationship between the soldiers and the Japanese civilians than was actually the case. For example, it completely avoids the mass civilian suicides that made the battle so infamous, where whole families were forced to jump to their deaths, and were shot by Japanese soldiers if they refused. It attempts to have you believe that Oba and his men had no idea of the bombing campaign being waged against the Japanese homeland, which is absurd - they were hiding within 3 miles of the busiest airfields in the world at that time. Yet, in the film, Oba knows nothing of this until he sneaks into the civilian internment camp, and is shown images of Tokyo destroyed. But when the B-29s finally make their appearance, roaring low overhead as Oba sneaks back into the jungle, it is supremely well done. The film also fails to show some of the actions Oba's men took after the war was over, such as shooting unarmed American soldiers swimming at the beach, months after the war was over. These were documented in American war hero Guy Gabaldon's (aka "the Pied Piper of Saipan") memoirs , who was part of the Marine unit who hunted Oba after the battle, and was ultimately shot by his men during a firefight and shipped home. Gabaldon accuses Oba of being a war criminal in his book. Of course, it must be said that the book upon which the screenplay is based, was written by a former US Marine who was also a part of the hunt, who in turn admired Oba and did not feel that he was a war criminal. Nevertheless, these omissions are the biggest failing of the film, and made it difficult for me to swallow the "honorable" image the filmmaker strives so hard to achieve.
If you're a fan of World War II films and history, this movie is well worth your viewing. It was infinitely better than "Wind Talkers", which was also set in Saipan, but horribly inaccurate and probably cost far more to produce.