Most, hogy mondod tényleg. Ezért tűnt fel, hogy mennyire nem japán arca van. Nopersze arrafele rühellnek minden idegent, nem véletlenül fejlesztenek robotokat, se! Inkább egy robot, mint egy kínai... hehe
Bár ebben a filmben nincs véresen brutális jelenet, ámde erősen japános. Elkészült a gésa naplójának filmváltozata. A trailer alapján még jó is lehet. A könyv legalábbis jó volt.
nekem még hátravan a genji herceges, meg a Keyserling amit ugyan állandóan magamnál hordok, de valahogy nem vesz rá a lélek hogy folytassam a huszadik oldalról. a japán háborús bűnösös meg a hitleres is remek volt, sőt még a maslócka is tetszett annak ellenére, hogy tkp elég nagy szar. hehe. azért William. S. Burroughs, vagy ki, hehe (remélem jól írtam a nevét) jobb nála ebben a stílusban
A rövid tanfolyamot meg rövidsége miatt hívták így. Voltak hozzá útmutatók is, hogy nehogy eltévedjen a vörösdiák. Meg persze upgrédelték évenként, mivel elfogytak belőlle az emberek, vagy kiderült róluk, hogy árulók voltak. Mindig is.
Na abszolváltam a SAW2-t is immár. Tetszett. Eltekintve a hatásvadász érzelmeskedéstől meg a mesterséges izgalomfokozástól, a filozófiája maradt a régi, sőt, a sorozatggyilkos kifejezetten pozitív karakterré alakult :)
Aztán a vége felé helyrekerülnek a dolgok, mert a háborús foglyok táborát összefonják azokéval, akik a császár parancsára tették le a fegyvert és az utóbbiak tudják mi a dörgés... hehe
amiből megtudhatjuk hogy hal meg egy igazi oldschool japán kapitány: sütit majszol, miközben a hajójával eltűnik a hullámok között.
részlet
"The special order sending the Yamato to Okinawa was written with large letters on white paper and posted on the port side of the first deck, reported Shizuo Kunimoto who had been serving as a Lieutenant Junior Grade on the Yamato. After the Yamato set sail, all hands not on duty (about 2000 men) were assembled on the forecastle to hear their specific orders read by the ship's Executive Officer. "We were told from [by] our Senior Chief that we were not able to return alive from the mission," recalled Heiji Tsuboi who had been a Petty Officer 2nd Class and manned the battleship’s No. 5 anti-aircraft battery. However, the Yamato sailors still bravely continued to honor their traditions after hearing their collective death warrant. Kunimoto commanded his men to bow toward the Imperial Palace and then toward their homes. He then led them in singing military songs for about ten minutes, but patriotism and courage didn't change what would happen. "I was busy operating my anti-aircraft gun all through the battle until the ship's last minutes," Tsuboi said. "I remember well that I felt a somewhat heavy shock had been transmitted from the bottom of the ship. I thought it must be a torpedo attack but did not think the ship would be sunk."
...
As torpedo after torpedo rammed into the Yamato, the ship began to die. “The horizon seemed to take on a mad new angle,” Yoshida said. “Dark waves splattered and reached for us as the stricken ship heeled to an incredible list of 80 degrees.”
Men responded differently as what they knew to be certain death approached. The chief of staff on the Yamato, his face wreathed in smiles, cheerfully praised the Americans for their skill and bravery. Kunimoto, who was a damage control officer, realized his ship was doomed as water rushed in around them. Still, he and his shipmates began giving cheers of "Long reign the Emperor." After being hit on the left or port side repeatedly by torpedoes, the ship began listing badly to the left. In desperation, Ariga ordered the starboard engineering spaces counter-flooded. Hundreds of men manning the battleship's lower decks were thus sentenced to drowning without the slightest chance of survival. The counter-flooding did no good. Tsuboi stayed at his station until the order to abandon ship was given.
He, like Kunimoto and Yoshida, managed to swim clear. Vice Admiral Itô did not survive. When he saw that he would not fulfill his mission and that most of the men in his squadron were either dead or wounded, he shook hands and said farewell to the few of his remaining staff officers and started for his flag cabin to await the end. His adjutant, Lt. Commander Ishida, followed him. It was Ishida’s job to wait on the Admiral; now he wished to join the Admiral in death but the chief of staff forcibly stopped him. “You don’t have to go. Don’t be a fool.” Ishida hesitated, averted his face, and then gave in. He did not follow his Admiral. (Both the chief of staff and Ishida survived the mission.)
Ariga also did not survive the mission. Having completed the final dispositions—the code books, the portrait of the Emperor, etc—Ariga, still in the antiaircraft command post on the very top of the bridge and wearing his helmet and flack jacket, tied himself to the binnacle. He then issued a command for all hands to come on deck, shouted banzai three times, and then turned to the four surviving lookouts standing by his side. They were devoted to their captain and did not want to leave him, but Ariga would have none of this. He slapped each on the shoulder, encouraged them to be cheerful and pushed them into the water. The fourth sailor pressed his last four biscuits into the captain’s hand, as if to show his deepest feelings. The captain took them with a grin. He was eating the second biscuit when he was engulfed along with the ship."