Key details: 1) modified torpedo to float in at 12-feet under water. 2) map out the road to and back and forth. 3) Japanese Navy officer stressed to declare war before attack, but Jap. Embassy did one hour after its attack! (above - for video clip)
Another misleading scene. Japanese did mistook the decomissioned turretless USS Utah on the other side of the Ford Island as an aircraft carrier and attacked it with bombs and torpedoes. Yamamoto at first believed that at least one carrier was sunk and was overjoyed, throwing away his second cigarette that he was smoking at the time and congratulated his colleagues. It was much later that he discovered that that was not the carrier that he thought was sunk.
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American fight spirit -- Japs. mis-judgment "
Shot in color by U.S. naval cameramen, including Commander John Ford with his handheld 16mm camera, "The Battle of Midway" is the quintessential example of a wartime combat documentary. It is a stunning visual record of the U.S.'s vital win in the Pacific, with moving narration describing the sacrifices that come with victory.
Recipient of a 1942 Special Award for "the historical value of its achievement in offering a camera record of one of the decisive battles of the world -- a record unique both for the courage of those who made it under fire, and for its magnificent portrayal of the gallantry of our armed forces in battle."
Learn more about the Academy War Film Collection by clicking the following link http://www.oscars.org/film-archive/co...