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In Reply to: "Tora Tora Tora" posted by rico on January 26, 2005 at 17:30:42:
he passed on years ago, but flew Spitefires in the BofB. Unfortunately, he crashed three of them and they finally took his keys away. He wrote a great book on Douglas Bader, who was a Brit pilot who had his legs amputated, but still flew. He also was one of the few people from the West, who interviewed Adolf Galland. His wife was a radio operator who had 16 parachute jumps behind Nazi lines. Hearing them tell 'war stories' after knocking back a few scotches as a teen, was a treat. He moved to LA and did screenwriting for TV shows like Hart To Hart.Tora, Tora, Tora is a great flick and will always occupy a soft spot in my heart for this reason...just a personal bias I guess?
Follow Ups:
"Tora Tora Tora" Writing credits (in alphabetical order):
Ladislas Farago book "The Broken Seal: Operation Magic and
the Secret Road to Pearl Harbor"
Larry Forrester American and bridging sequences
Ryuzo Kikushima Japanese sequences
Akira Kurosawa Japanese sequences (uncredited)
Hideo Oguni Japanese sequences
Gordon W. Prange book
with American Military Intelligence in a supporting role; for without the turning of an incredibly blind eye to Japanese naval movements, this production might never have been possibleGrins
here you go...Chris
Yes, I saw that when I looked him up. I wasn't trying to be picky. I posted this because of Kurosawa's uncredited involvement, which surprised me.
I thought you were being a stickler due to the fact that he didn't write the whole thing. I have my DVD packed away, but I do recall that there were two other writers and I should have been more specific.It's a great flick IMO.
Take care and sorry.
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