The best Hiroki Matsukata’s war movies

Hiroki Matsukata

Hiroki Matsukata

23/07/1942- 21/01/2017
We present our ranking of the best Hiroki Matsukata’s movies. Do you love cinema? Or are you looking for a movie of your favorite actor to watch tonight? Surely you have some to see or that you did not know yet about Hiroki Matsukata.

Four Days of Snow and Blood

Four Days of Snow and Blood
6.3/10
Based on the "2.26 Incident", an attempted coup d'état in Japan 1936, launched by radical ultra-nationalist parts of the military. Several leading politicians were killed and the center of Tokyo was briefly held by the insurgents before the coup was suppressed.

Classmates

Classmates
7/10
  • Genre: DramaWar
  • Release: 03/06/1967
  • Character: Second Sublieutenant Shiratori
A story of young students trained to become Kamikaze pilots in World War II.

Father of the Kamikaze

Father of the Kamikaze
7.1/10
Vice Admiral Takajiro Ohnishi could see that Japan's defeat in WWII was inevitable. He came to realize that the only way to force a negotiated solution was to convince the Americans that invading Japan would cause massive casualties on both sides. The cold logic of suicide attacks, where one man and one plane could kill hundreds, seemed the only solution. In one of the cruel ironies of fate, Ohnishi actually succeeded; he convinced the Americans that invading Japan would be too costly in lives. But what he could not foresee was that America had another way of ending the war.

Human Torpedoes

Human Torpedoes
6.5/10
Story of loyal sailors giving their lives for their country as human torpedoes towards the end of the War.

Tokugawa Ichizoku no Houkai

Tokugawa Ichizoku no Houkai

Mission: Iron Castle

Mission: Iron Castle
7.4/10
The Shinobi-no-Mono series was so successful that Daiei Studios dipped into the well one more time, making the best 60′s B&W ninja movie ever seen in the otherwise color-dominated year of 1970. Issei Mori directs Hiroki Matsukata as the reluctant leader of a small band of spies charged with kidnapping a noblewoman from a heavily ninja-proofed castle. The finality of the air slowly began to fill like smoke, and in all that had become dark the loyalty of the Ninja who dared to go shone like light as they entered a world shrouded in mystery. Things do not go as planned in what is possibly the darkest and most fatalistic of the already noir-ish 60′s fare. Both the decade and it’s distinctive style of shinobi cinema went out on a high note with Mission Iron Castle.

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