Characters that make no logical sense, side-stories that never get a decent conclusion, non-stop interruption by very well performed but still mostly unwelcome band music until finally, the battle begins after a hour and a half of screen time.
Battle scenes look great for the time and budget, still the director in characteristic Japanese fashion tried too hard to make the nasty side of war take the front stage, its not horrible, but it gets really silly when the movie wants you to believe Admiral Togo is completely unprotected on the upper deck getting merely soaked by water while his sailors are all getting their limbs blow off one after the one just bellow.
Movie ends in the middle of the battle, telling you instead of showing you what happened after the very first engagements, almost as if the production ran out of money.
Plot summary
Japan's great victory in the Battle Of Tsushima Strait which devastated the Russian Fleet when Admiral Togo crossed the lining up the Japanese Combines Fleet so that they could utilize all their ships batteries while the Russians could only use their forward guns. The title refers to the song Umi Yukaba (If I Go Away To The Sea)that was sung by the Japanese military when going off to war.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
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Way too much build-up for little payout.
Terrible!
Rarely I would encounter such badly scripted boring screenplay. About 4/5 of it was wasted in loosely patched scenes with lot of nonesense dialog. The Japanese Navy in this movie just looked like a bunch street thugs on a floating metal tub. I didn't expect this sea battle movie so childishly made. The high ranking Japanese officers were very serious, but the low level sailors were just a bunch of yoyos in white sailors uniforms. What a joke!
A more youthful perspective on the Russo-Japanese War.
Mifune Toshiro previously played Japanese naval hero Togo Heihachiro in Maruyama Seiji's "Battle of the Japan Sea" (Nihonkai daikasen, 1969),a large-scale production, that offered a general outlook of the Russo-Japanese War (1904 - 1905). Mifune reprises the role in "Battle Anthem" (Nihonkai daikasen: Umi yukaba, 1983). The film has a different perspective. Instead of depicting the diplomatic players, as the previous film did, this gives the central attention to the young soldiers, who fought in the war, as well as Japan's decisive victory in Tsushima Strait.
Though neither of these films really clicked for myself, I found this to be the better one, despite it being nowhere near as famous as the predecessor. At least this film paints characters that the audience comes to know, and shows what it was like to be a Japanese soldier at time. Then again, if you come to watch this film without any historical background about that particular war, you may get a little lost, as this film is not going for a thorough contextualization as "Battle of the Japan Sea" did.
Unlike the previous film, this one has a romance. I did not care for it, as it starts as pure harassment, and then turns into melodrama. Also, if you are a Mifune fan, you are probably are going to enjoy "Battle of the Japan Sea" much more, since he doesn't have nearly as much screen-time in "Battle Anthem". Togo is also a character so widely admired, that Mifune's two performances as this man are one-dimensional, and even stale. Mifune does not get to show his versatility as an actor, but instead just reads his lines like a good boy.
If you are not terribly interested in Japanese war films, I wouldn't really recommend either of these films. The Japanese have made so much better films about World War II and other conflicts in the country's long history.