Release calendarTop 250 moviesMost popular moviesBrowse movies by genreTop box officeShowtimes & ticketsMovie newsIndia movie spotlight
    What's on TV & streamingTop 250 TV showsMost popular TV showsBrowse TV shows by genreTV news
    What to watchLatest trailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb SpotlightFamily entertainment guideIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsEmmysToronto Int'l Film FestivalIMDb TIFF Portrait StudioHispanic Heritage MonthSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAll events
    Born todayMost popular celebsCelebrity news
    Help centerContributor zonePolls
For industry professionals
  • Language
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Sign in
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Use app
  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
  • Trivia
  • FAQ
IMDbPro

Under the Flag of the Rising Sun

Original title: Gunki hatameku moto ni
  • 1972
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Under the Flag of the Rising Sun (1972)
DramaMysteryWar

One woman's search to find the truth about her husband's death in World War II.One woman's search to find the truth about her husband's death in World War II.One woman's search to find the truth about her husband's death in World War II.

  • Director
    • Kinji Fukasaku
  • Writers
    • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Norio Osada
    • Kaneto Shindô
  • Stars
    • Tetsurô Tanba
    • Sachiko Hidari
    • Shinjirô Ebara
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kinji Fukasaku
    • Writers
      • Kinji Fukasaku
      • Norio Osada
      • Kaneto Shindô
    • Stars
      • Tetsurô Tanba
      • Sachiko Hidari
      • Shinjirô Ebara
    • 16User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos14

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 8
    View Poster

    Top cast33

    Edit
    Tetsurô Tanba
    Tetsurô Tanba
    • Sergeant Katsuo Togashi
    Sachiko Hidari
    Sachiko Hidari
    • Sakie Togashi
    Shinjirô Ebara
      Isao Natsuyagi
      Isao Natsuyagi
      Sanae Nakahara
      • Mrs. Ochi
      Yumiko Fujita
      • Sakie's daughter
      Noboru Mitani
      Noboru Mitani
      • Pvt. Tsuguo Terajima
      Taketoshi Naitô
      Taketoshi Naitô
      Kôichi Yamamoto
      Kôichi Yamamoto
      Paul Maki
      Mugihito
      Shônosuke Ichikawa
      Hachizô Fujikawa
      Sakae Umezu
      Sakae Umezu
      Harukazu Kitami
      Hiroshi Kitasôma
      Nenji Kobayashi
      Takashi Sue
      • Director
        • Kinji Fukasaku
      • Writers
        • Kinji Fukasaku
        • Norio Osada
        • Kaneto Shindô
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews16

      8.01.2K
      1
      2
      3
      4
      5
      6
      7
      8
      9
      10

      Featured reviews

      10gatsby06

      Not just about Japan

      If you are thinking of watching this, you need to know what your are getting into first. This is a violent movie, in the extreme.

      I do not ordinarily watch violent movies. But I am glad I watched this one, even though I had to turn away a few times. The subject matter is about violence, and the director pulls no punches.

      It is so easy to romanticize war, either in victory or defeat. This movie clearly has a message for the Japanese people about WWII that the director intends them never to forget. That it was received so well, speaks well of the Japanese people's honesty. And it has a message for her Asian neighbors who suffered at the hands of Japanese soldiers, that perhaps hate is no longer appropriate.

      Viewing it as an American, I was struck by how different the image is from that of the well-disciplined soldier presented almost as a polite stereotype in Hollywood movies. An American director could not have gotten away with such a movie. However, I can't help wondering if this is perhaps not exactly a representative view of what Japanese soldiers went through.

      The movie is told very effectively through its plot, following the inquiries of the war widow into the death of her husband. As the truth comes out, it hits you in the gut much as it would have hit this widow.

      At the same time, the director apparently did not intend for this film to be viewed too narrowly as an antiwar movie. It is not just about war, and it is not just about Japanese soldiers, it is about human beings, and what any of us might do in similar circumstances.
      chaos-rampant

      Another terribly underseen Japanese war film

      If Japanese war films are snubbed in the West, that's not done on any political grounds. The Japanese are not only the first to condemn the rigid militarism that brought them to the brink of complete destruction following WWII but the only ones to offer that condemnation against Emperor and Generals in such a scathing manner. If you won't find films like this or THE BATTLE OF OKINAWA mentioned in the same lists as their Vietnam-war American counterparts like APOCALYPSE NOW, it has to do with the same cultural reasons that keep Japanese (or French and Italian) crime films in the shadow while Scorsese, Tarantino and their cohorts reap all the glory.

      And even when the spotlight falls on the individual, the lowly Japanese soldier haphazardly trained in a few weeks time and sent with meager provisions to conquer New Guinea, the Philippines, or Indonesia in the name of the 'Motherland', the focus is not on a heroic celebration of courage and valor because these men where not heroes and what courage they showed in the face of death was instilled in them by the fear of worse things like malaria and malnutrition or even worse, the fear of their superiors executing them for cowardice, but on grim endurance beyond all hope and glory with nothing else to look forward to but returning home to a wartorn devastated country. The chaos squalor and misery of postwar Japan Kinji Fukasaku knows firsthand. It's the place and time he grew up in and the memory of that misery would resurface regularly in his films as a bleak backdrop to the yakuza films through which he became known and for which he never received the acclaim he deserved.

      This is the greatest success of UNDER THE FLAG OF THE RISING SUN. Not the narrative maze of the script carrying echoes of RASHOMON and even CITIZEN KANE that has the wife of an executed soldier trying to piece together the life and death of her husband in New Guinea through the memories of his surviving comrades and superiors. It's the hopelessness and savagery of men trying to survive like beasts in the jungle, this relived in a booming 1960's modern Japan by the survivors in the form of flashbacks, that sets apart films like this and Kon Ichikawa's FIRES IN THE PLAIN from their American counterparts. Major battle scenes and historic events are in the background, presented in Fukasaku's trademark quick montages using stock photos. It's the day-to-day tragic struggle for survival for which there is no glory to be had that pucks the real punch and it's enough of a punch to make you ignore the problematic script or poor handling of exposition. In the end, one of the survivors living in a garbage-strewn shantytown outside of Tokyo, bemoans not the misery and destruction of postwar Japan but its rapid economic growth that has no room for scarred veterans like him. Vietnam veterans of 30 years later would relate.
      9squelcho

      Serious and sobering.

      I'm a fan of Fukasaku's gritty doomed gangster movies, and have come to expect a harrowing exposition of human frailty and self destruction, usually at a very personal level. However, this movie plays out on a much grander scale as it sets about exploring the nature of nationalism, militarism, obedience, subjective reality, repressed memory, and guilt. I'm hard pressed to think of a western movie that digs so deeply into the despair of war widows, or examines their feelings in such minute detail. Technically it's almost a documentary, but personalised by the heroine's relentless quest for the truth.

      Far from being a glorious affair full of grand heroism and precision munitions, war is a filthy business conducted at the sharp end by people who have little or nothing to gain by it. At the blunt end, the politicians and generals eat well and live a life of whimsical luxury while their forces starve and die brutally in foul conditions. Odd that so few filmmakers choose to explore the madness that sends millions to their death for overweening greed, imperial insanity, or even a bare faced lie. The Blue Max, Dr. Strangelove, and Oh What a Lovely War, amongst others, have examined the glib lunacy inherent in the equation, but Fukasaku's movie is all the more poignant for its protagonist's middle aged ordinariness.

      If someone tells you that Battle Royale is Fukasaku's finest hour, just ask them if they've seen this movie. It's not "easy" to watch, but it's educational and moving. Try it with rice instead of popcorn.
      9fertilecelluloid

      Incredibly honest portrait of homosapien behavior

      Searing indictment of war and the individuals discredited in its aftermath. Directed by the masterful Kinji Fukasaku, it is a harsh, bleak work that uses monochrome flashbacks with occasional explosions of color, war photographs, and grim narration to tell a terrible tale.

      Sachiko Hidari, a war widow, has spent twenty-six years searching for the truth about her husband's death. Was he executed? Was he a deserter? Was he a hero? As the government adheres to an official, flawed version of events, the stubborn woman seeks her own answers by speaking to the men who served with her husband. The stories told by these damaged soldiers comprise the bulk of the movie and accounts are complicated by each man's "truth".

      Exceptionally well acted and directed with a savage determination to depict the insanity of war in its rawest state, this is surely one of Fukasaku's greatest achievements and certainly one of the most honest portraits of homosapien behavior ever branded to celluloid.
      9sc8031

      A distinguished entry by Fukasaku and an important Japanese WWII film

      "Under the Flag of the Rising Sun" or "Gunki hatameku motoni" is a film by Kinji Fukasaku, a Japanese director renown for his work in the crime and 'chambara' film genres. This film was made by the director amid a streak of Yakuza-oriented films and shares some of the same filming style characteristic of his other films, detailed and somber character portraits, sudden outbursts of intentionally ugly and clumsy violence, intimate romantic relationships which end tragically or abruptly, and protagonists who have trouble compromising their own moral integrity to fit in with changing social hierarchies.

      The main protagonist of this film is a Japanese war widow attempting to find out the actual events behind her husband's disappearance from his military station in New Guinea. After the war, Sakie Togashi never received a pension for her husband's military service because Sergeant Togashi was apparently court-martialed, but no official details are disclosed to her by social services or government offices for twenty years after his disappearance. Feeling sorry for her, several social workers give her the names of four men from her husband's platoon who returned to Japan after the war.

      The film mixes the present-day (1970s) settings and quest of Sakie Togashi with various flashbacks involving her husband and the company members on New Guinea. This is interspersed with old war footage and photographs from the Pacific Theater. The more chaotic or violent scenes are often filmed in the manner of many action films from the early 1970s, with chopped, slow-motion effects and caustic drawn-out sounds.

      Under the Flag of the Rising Sun is reminiscent of other important films (Rashomon, Jacob's Ladder, The Deer Hunter, The Human Condition) about the aftereffects of 20th century war on the human psyche, family and social networks, and the common people who end up fighting for their country. There are some good quotes from some of the retired soldiers, such as "people from the bottom of the heap never rest in peace," implying that individuals who occupy the less influential rungs of society are constantly manipulated by those in positions of power. It is a unique film for a Japanese filmmaker, in a country rarely known to recant its actions during World War II.

      More like this

      Sympathy for the Underdog
      7.3
      Sympathy for the Underdog
      Battles Without Honor and Humanity
      7.4
      Battles Without Honor and Humanity
      Street Mobster
      7.1
      Street Mobster
      Cops vs. Thugs
      7.2
      Cops vs. Thugs
      Hiroshima Death Match
      7.4
      Hiroshima Death Match
      Proxy War
      7.3
      Proxy War
      Japan Organized Crime Boss
      7.0
      Japan Organized Crime Boss
      Final Episode
      7.3
      Final Episode
      Police Tactics
      7.3
      Police Tactics
      New Battles Without Honor and Humanity
      6.9
      New Battles Without Honor and Humanity
      Yakuza Graveyard
      7.0
      Yakuza Graveyard
      Graveyard of Honor
      7.1
      Graveyard of Honor

      Related interests

      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama
      Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
      Mystery
      Band of Brothers (2001)
      War

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Director Kinji Fukasaku used his own money to buy the film rights to the novel.
      • Goofs
        All entries contain spoilers
      • Quotes

        Corporal Tomotaka Akiba: Here I am alive and well ... but this is just the dregs of my life. My real life ... ended over there.

      • Connections
        Referenced in Black Sunshine: Conversations with T.F. Mou (2011)

      Top picks

      Sign in to rate and Watchlist for personalized recommendations
      Sign in

      FAQ13

      • How long is Under the Flag of the Rising Sun?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • March 12, 1972 (Japan)
      • Country of origin
        • Japan
      • Language
        • Japanese
      • Also known as
        • Under the Fluttering Military Flag
      • Production companies
        • Shinsei Eigasha
        • Toho Film (Eiga) Co. Ltd.
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 36m(96 min)
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

      Contribute to this page

      Suggest an edit or add missing content
      • Learn more about contributing
      Edit page

      More to explore

      Recently viewed

      Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
      Get the IMDb App
      Sign in for more accessSign in for more access
      Follow IMDb on social
      Get the IMDb App
      For Android and iOS
      Get the IMDb App
      • Help
      • Site Index
      • IMDbPro
      • Box Office Mojo
      • License IMDb Data
      • Press Room
      • Advertising
      • Jobs
      • Conditions of Use
      • Privacy Policy
      • Your Ads Privacy Choices
      IMDb, an Amazon company

      © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.