The Central Scrutinizer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2001
- Messages
- 53,097
I suspect that might be Midway you are thinking off - Sensuround was not around when Tora Tora Tora was released
Come to think of it, I think you're right.
I suspect that might be Midway you are thinking off - Sensuround was not around when Tora Tora Tora was released
Eh? Not following that.
I have a thread here about his attitude toward the fact that the attack came before the declaration of war. It was a Japanese tradition, so he couldn't very well claim it was a mistake.
The guy on the left in your photo is holding something - might be a camera boom of some sort
He seemed to be the only Japanese commander who had a realistic view of Japanese capabilities (his "run wild for six months" comments, for example). Most of the rest seemed to feel that "one touch of the iron glove" would be enough to roll up the Americans.
I doubt if the UK managed to double the production of consumer goods, or increase production of anything except the most immediate necessaries. But things never got intolerably bad, as far as my parents informed me.We doubled the production of consumer goods during WWII while still supporting our own military needs and Lend Lease.![]()
I doubt if the UK managed to double the production of consumer goods, or increase production of anything except the most immediate necessaries. But things never got intolerably bad, as far as my parents informed me.
Thanks for that! Superb.The War Illustrated I've had dozens of people tell me they spotted relatives in those.![]()
No I didn't know that - Here are some great shots of the model work done for the film.
We doubled the production of consumer goods during WWII while still supporting our own military needs and Lend Lease.![]()
The U.S. went from being the Policeman of the Americas to the World's Policeman. We will never finish paying for the consequences.
Definitely. Not to mention taking real aircraft and turning them into reasonable-looking facsimiles of the actual Japanese aircraft. The rows and rows of P-40s on runways being smashed to bits is darned impressive as well. I recall reading something about that many years ago, how a large number of full-scale fiberglass replicas of P-40s were made for the airfield attack sequences.
I have heard a lot of different stories about the propeller stunt - some say it was planned, some say it just sort of happened
Well, in fairness, it helped that U.S. industry had several thousands of miles of open ocean on each side to protect it from strategic air attack. Large air raids by fleets of heavy bombers can have something of a retarding effect on industrial production.
Works better than Imperialism, most of the time. Is the UK "isolationist" because it is no longer world hegemon, with an ocean-commanding fleet? And a mighty Empire?Yeah, Isolationism always works so well........
The perceptive viewer will notice that there's only one P-40 crash in that movie.
Does the book lay out how advertisers built on those underlying prejudices, maybe even created rather than just sustained them?
I suspect that might be Midway you are thinking off - Sensuround was not around when Tora Tora Tora was released
I've asked this before: what in Heaven's name made them think anything so evidently absurd? Not merely think it, but wager their country's wellbeing on it!He seemed to be the only Japanese commander who had a realistic view of Japanese capabilities (his "run wild for six months" comments, for example). Most of the rest seemed to feel that "one touch of the iron glove" would be enough to roll up the Americans.