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James Whitmore | Adm. William F. Halsey | |
Jason Robards | Lt. Gen. Walter C. Short | |
Joseph Cotten | Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson | |
Martin Balsam | Adm. Husband E. Kimmel | |
E.G. Marshall | Lt. Col. Rufus G. Bratton | |
Eijiro Tono | Admiral Nagumo | |
Tatsuya Mihashi | Cmdr. Minoru Genda | |
Takahiro Tamura | Lt. Cmdr. Mitsuo Fuchida | |
Koreya Senda | Prince Duke Fumimaro Konoye | |
Soh Yamamura | ||
Wesley Addy | Lt. Commander Alvin D. Kramer | |
Sô Yamamura | Admiral Yamamoto | |
Eijirô Tôno | Admiral Nagumo |
Director |
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Producer | Elmo Williams
Otto Lang Richard Fleischer Keinosuke Kubo |
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Writer | Ryuzo Kikushima
Hideo Oguni Akira Kurosawa Larry Forrester |
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Musician | Jerry Goldsmith
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The Day of Infamy that should never have been. Tora! Tora! Tora! Is the Japanese signal to attack - and the movie meticulously recreates the attack on Pearl Harbor and the events leading up to it. Opening scenes contrast the American and Japanese positions. Japanese imperialists decide to stage the attack. Top U.S. brass ignore its possibility. Intercepted Japanese messages warn of it - but never reach F.D.R.'s desk. Radar warnings are disregarded. Even the entrapment of a Japanese submarine in Pearl Harbor before the attack goes unreported. Ultimately the Day of infamy arrives - in the most spectacular , gut-wrenching cavalcade of action-packed footage ever. It's the most dazzling recreation of America's darkest day - and some of her finest hours. |
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