This old-fashioned combat
flick picks up where the great 1944 war drama Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo left off—Midway dramatizes one of the many retaliatory air strikes the U.S.
and Japan exchanged following Japan’s initial 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. When
the story begins, the U.S. Navy is struggling to replace ships destroyed at Pearl Harbor. When an
intelligence officer (Hal Holbrook) intercepts communications suggesting the
Japanese are planning to attack U.S. ships stationed at Midway
Island—potentially a devastating repeat of Pearl Harbor—various officers spring
into action preparing defensive maneuvers. Like 1970’s Tora! Tora! Tora!, this picture cuts back and forth between
American and Japanese strategy sessions. In addition to humanizing the enemy,
this technique lets viewers see how luck and tactical errors have as much
bearing on military success as heroism and leadership.
For
instance, some of the best scenes take place aboard a Japanese carrier, where Vice
Admiral Chuichi Nagumo (James Shigeta) wrangles with doubtful subordinates,
resulting in indecisiveness. There’s some great stuff buried in Midway, but, unfortunately, lesser
material is given the primary focus—the main storyline involves Captain Matt
Garth (Charlton Heston), a strong-willed junior officer whose role in the
battle is relatively inconsequential. The filmmakers waste gobs of time, for instance, on the melodramatic
romance between Garth’s son and a Japanese-American civilian, which leads to
trite discussions about race relations. Plus, once the bludgeoning air/sea
battle gets underway, the movie introduces so many characters that text appears
onscreen to identify new people.
Even with these visual aids, however, it’s hard to
track which ships are where, whose plane took off from which airstrip, and, for
that matter, which side is winning. Still, before things get too hectic, Midway lets a handful of charismatic
actors shine in showcase moments. Holbrook is a hoot as the excitable code
breaker; Henry Fonda lends authority as the top U.S. admiral; Glenn Ford is
effectively stoic as a soft-spoken naval commander; and Robert Mitchum plays an
enjoyable cameo as a cranky admiral consigned to bed rest. (Cinema legend Toshiro
Mifune essays a small role as Fonda’s Japanese counterpart, but his lines were
dubbed into English by actor Paul Frees, the voice of Rocky & Bullwinkle villain Boris Badenov.) While these virtues aren’t enough to lift Midway out of mediocrity, any American war
picture that resists the temptation to demonize the opposing side is inherently
admirable.
Midway:
FUNKY
Recently caught this on late night tv. I agree there are some good performances and both sides are treated fairly. But the editing towards the end, blending archival footage into the film, really felt clunky. Still more watchable than Michael Bay's Pearl Harbor!
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