HOLLYWOOD, the greatest place where great movies were made there. All kinds of movie were made there were legend and making big history in the world of entertainment. Besides that, many great and legendary actors and actresses born where all kind people will idolize them. But the main topic here is that, when making a movie with true event kind of movie, how true we can see in the movie itself and how the movie makers wanted to put more lies just to gain the popularity by the neglecting the truth about the movie. In my opinion, people need to hear the truth and also the imagination how the movie makers making the movie.
The first movie that i would like to talk about is the movie called "The Pearl Harbor". As the history written in a book, the greatest disaster in US army has ever facing when the Japanese Imperial Army launch a mass attack on the greatest port of US Navy where the army warships gather around. The history has explain briefly about what happen on the Pearl Harbor but in the movie is it true?
Pearl Harbor is not so much the story of Pearl Harbor itself, but rather follows the trail of two army pilots and their love interest as they make their way across the world loving, flying, and fighting. Truthfully, though it is the focal point of the movie, the battle of Pearl Harbor itself seems to have very little lasting impact on its main characters. Sadly, the battle of Pearl’s effect on its audience is even less.
The scene where the spy story in the movie. Takeo Yoshikawa was a 27-year-old graduate of Japan's naval academy who, in the closing months of 1941, was dispatched to Oahu to spy on the Pacific Fleet. He was given the cover name of Tadashi Morimura, and assigned to the Japanese consulate in Honolulu. This immediately aroused the suspicions of Western intelligence agencies, who could find no Morimura in the diplomatic registries. Now, the Americans, you remember, had cracked the Japanese code, and were reading intercepted diplomatic and military messages: Morimura was tracked all the way to Honolulu and met on his arrival by at least one undercover agent. Documents uncovered by Stinnett through the Freedom of Information Act reveal that every move made by Morimura in Hawaii was observed, and his frequent and detailed reports to his superiors in Tokyo were known not only to the Navy, but were sent to Washington by priority dispatch.
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