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  • 20.7.2025
watch the full length movie and more here: https://youtu.be/qqY--ohIddE

Tora! Tora! Tora! (Japanese: トラ・トラ・トラ!) is a 1970 epic war film that dramatizes the events leading up to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, from both American and Japanese positions. The film was produced by Elmo Williams and directed by Richard Fleischer, Toshio Masuda and Kinji Fukasaku. It features an ensemble cast, including Martin Balsam, Joseph Cotten, So Yamamura, E.G. Marshall, James Whitmore, Tatsuya Mihashi, Takahiro Tamura, Wesley Addy, and Jason Robards. It was Masuda and Fukasaku's first English-language film, and first international co-production.

The tora of the title, although literally meaning "tiger", is actually an abbreviation of a two-syllable codeword (i.e., totsugeki raigeki 突撃雷撃, "lightning attack"), used to indicate that complete surprise had been achieved.

The film was released in the United States by 20th Century-Fox on September 23, 1970, and in Japan by the Toei Company on September 25. It received mixed reviews from American critics, but was praised for its historical accuracy and attention to detail, its visual effects, and its action sequences. Tora! Tora! Tora! was nominated for five Oscars at the 43rd Academy Awards, including Best Cinematography and Best Film Editing, winning Best Visual Effects (L.B. Abbott and A.D. Flowers). The National Board of Review ranked it in its Top Ten Films of 1971. A 1994 survey at the USS Arizona Memorial determined that for Americans the film was the most common source of popular knowledge about the Pearl Harbor attack.

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Transkript
00:00The incredible attack on Pearl Harbor, as told from both the United States and Japanese sides.
00:14Once two nations made war, today they have collaborated to make a motion picture of unequal magnitude and importance,
00:22recreating the actual events leading up to the day that changed the course of history.
00:30Tora, Tora, Tora!
00:38Tora, Tora, Tora, an unprecedented film, bringing you answers to one of the most controversial mysteries of our age.
00:46How could the attack on Pearl Harbor have happened?
00:50Colonel, sir, if we do spot something, what do we do?
00:53Report it to headquarters, dammit!
00:55How, sir? We haven't got a telephone, sir.
00:57There's a gasoline station about a mile down the road. They must have a phone.
01:01Why was one nation unprepared while another was geared for war?
01:07Why did the plan for the sneak attack split the Japanese high command wide open?
01:13We should have stayed in San Diego where it belongs.
01:19I made the mistake of pointing that out to Roosevelt.
01:23Why was Admiral Yamamoto marked for assassination by the Japanese warlords?
01:29Does anybody trust anybody anymore?
01:31Why was the President of the United States office considered a security risk?
01:36How did the Japanese rehearse their doomsday attack on Pearl Harbor?
01:48Damn it, why can't Washington give us the full inside story?
01:52Why did they keep the American command in the dark?
01:56What part was played by the strange Japanese officer they called Gandhi?
02:00How did U.S. intelligence know of the attack before the Japanese ambassador did?
02:04What was the fateful blunder made by Admiral Nagumo?
02:08How was a mighty Japanese task force able to race 4,000 miles across the Pacific undetected?
02:24What caused the notorious radar error?
02:26Yeah, well, don't worry about it.
02:28Here's a message to the commanding general of the fourth chapter.
02:31Is it marked urgent?
02:32No.
02:33Why was Washington's last urgent warning sent by ordinary telegram?
02:45The sun came up, the bombs came down, and the world came apart.
02:50For the first time, a motion picture tells what really happened at Pearl Harbor.
02:56What?
02:57There's an emergency.
02:58There's an emergency.
02:59No, there's an emergency.
03:00That's correct.
03:01Hey!
03:02Hey!
03:03Hey, look out!
03:05Hey!
03:06Hey, you guys!
03:07Scatter!
03:08Scatter!
03:26The most spectacular film ever made.
03:33Forer, forer, forer!

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