The Last War: Difference between revisions

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Line 79: Line 79:
|Seiji Yoshida|''Kasagi Maru'' sailor
|Seiji Yoshida|''Kasagi Maru'' sailor
|Toshihiko Furuta|Helicopter crew
|Toshihiko Furuta|Helicopter crew
|Kyoko Mori|Childcare worker at day care
|Kyoko Mori|Childcare worker at the day care center
|Teruko Mita|Izawa, teacher at day care
|Teruko Mita|Izawa, teacher at the day care center
|Jiro Kumagai|Minister of Health and Welfare
|Jiro Kumagai|Minister of Health and Welfare
|Soji Ubukata|Minister of Education
|Soji Ubukata|Minister of Education
Line 94: Line 94:
|Yuko Tominaga|Haru Tamura, Mochiki's daughter
|Yuko Tominaga|Haru Tamura, Mochiki's daughter
|Yuki Shimizu|Female clerk at Sankamashi Electric company
|Yuki Shimizu|Female clerk at Sankamashi Electric company
|Toshiko Nakano|Neighbor A
|Tsurue Ichimanji|Neighbor B
|Tsurue Ichimanji|Neighbor B
|Toshiko Nakano|Neighbor A
{{col-2}}
{{col-2}}
*Asami Hotaka
*Asami Hotaka

Revision as of 02:41, 2 October 2023

Article.png
Image gallery for The Last War
Credits for The Last War
The Last War soundtrack


The Last War
The Japanese poster for The Last War
Alternate titles
Flagicon Japan.png The Great World War (1961)
See alternate titles
Directed by Shue Matsubayashi
Producer Sanezumi Fujimoto, Tomoyuki Tanaka
Written by Toshio Yasumi, Takeshi Kimura
Music by Ikuma Dan
Special
effects by
Eiji Tsuburaya
Production company Toho
Distributor TohoJP, Brenco Pictures CorporationUS, Heritage EnterprisesUS TV
Rating Not Rated
Distributor rentals ¥284.99 million[1]
Running time 110 minutesJP
(1 hour, 50 minutes)
79 minutesUS
(1 hour, 19 minutes)
Aspect ratio 2.35:1
Rate this film!
4.30
(10 votes)

LEARN WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF ANOTHER GLOBAL WAR BREAKS OUT
„ 

— International tagline

The Last War (世界大戦争,   Sekai Daisensō, lit. "The Great World War") is a 1961 tokusatsu science fiction drama film directed by Shue Matsubayashi and written by Toshio Yasumi and Takeshi Kimura, with special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya. Produced by Toho, it stars Frankie Sakai, Akira Takarada, Yuriko Hoshi, Nobuko Otawa, Yumi Shirakawa, Chishu Ryu, and Jerry Ito. The film was released to Japanese theaters by Toho on October 8, 1961, and premiered in the non-contiguous United States in Honolulu, Hawaii on December 29, 1961.[2] Brenco Pictures Corporation produced an English-dubbed version for wider American audiences, which saw release in November 1968 at two Southern California drive-ins before being picked up years later by Heritage Enterprises and sold to television.

Along with a by then customary Perspecta Stereophonic Sound-encoded mono track, The Last War was Toho's second film to be released in true 4-track magnetic stereo, while its international English dub was the first that Toho released in true stereo.

Plot

In 1961, Tokyo is a bustling metropolis and Japan has recovered from the devastation of the Second World War. Mokichi Tamura works as a limousine driver at a press center where foreign reporters gather, and invests in the stock market to try and support his ill wife Oyoshi and three children. Mokichi's eldest daughter Saeko is in love with a young sailor named Takano, and the two plan to get married. Takano finally returns to Tokyo after his latest voyage and visits Ebara, the cook on his ship who could not serve on the most recent voyage due to a stomach ulcer. While recovering from his operation, Ebara has been helping his daughter Sanae run her day care center. Ebara explains to Takano that his time helping with the day care center and being around children has helped him learn to enjoy life, even at his old age. Takano then comes to the Tamuras' home to stay with them for the time being. In Saeko's room, the two discuss asking for Mokichi's consent to their marriage. Saeko has already told her mother and received her blessing, but she is worried about what her father will say. Mokichi comes upstairs and overhears the conversation, and Saeko and Takano decide to finally ask for his blessing. Mokichi is hesitant, but his wife comes upstairs and joins the conversation. She recounts how madly in love Mokichi was with her when they were married, embarrassing him. Mokichi finally gives his blessing for the marriage, and the two begin planning for their wedding.

Outside of the Tamuras' peaceful family life, global political tensions are rising. The major world powers have split into two rival camps: the Federation consisting of the United States and its allies, and the Alliance consisting of the Soviet Union and its allies. Both sides have built up their nuclear arsenals, and the eruption of armed conflict could easily lead to a global nuclear war. The Cold War escalates when a Federal submarine enters Alliance military exercise ground in the North Atlantic. As a member of the Federation, Japan is obligated to take part in a war should one erupt. Despite currently suffering from a serious illness, Japanese Prime Minister Masaki is dedicated to finding a peaceful resolution and preventing a nuclear Armageddon. A close call occurs when a Federation base receives an accidental order to launch its nuclear arsenal. The base's commander reluctantly presses the launch button, but is informed of the error and manages to stop the countdown before the missile is launched. Watkins, an American reporter currently in Tokyo who is driven by Mokichi, visits Takano at the Tamuras' home and informs him that tensions are growing along the 38th parallel in Korea. He is worried that should armed conflict resume between the Federation-backed South Korea and Alliance-backed North Korea, it could lead to a broader global war. Watkins travels to the 38th parallel to report on the situation, shortly after which armed conflict begins as artillery on both sides exchange fire. Federation and Alliance fighters join the battle before both sides deploy ballistic nuclear missiles. While the missiles used are not particularly high yield, the use of nuclear weapons in an armed conflict is an unprecedented move that raises global concerns. The Alliance responds by constructing more missile silos at its North Pole missile base. While excavating through the ice with explosives, the Alliance accidentally triggers an avalanche that damages the controls for a nuclear missile, beginning a launch countdown. The general and personnel trapped inside the silo with the missile realize that once it is launched, retaliation will be immediate before anyone can realize it was fired in error and the world will be annihilated. Taking matters into his own hands, the general climbs to the top of the missile and succeeds in removing the activator before the missile launches. Soon after, a ceasefire is declared at the 38th parallel and relations between the Federation and Alliance seem to be improving. Military personnel on both sides have begun to breathe a sigh of relief, and plan for what they will do when they return home.

This peace is shattered once Federation and Alliance aircraft begin to battle over the Arctic Ocean. War is declared as forces from both sides begin entering each other's territory. The use of nuclear weapons by both sides to attack the other's major cities appears inevitable, and a panic breaks out. Takano elopes with Saeko in Yokohama before leaving for his next voyage. Hearing the news of the impending nuclear war at sea, Takano contacts Saeko via telegram and the two exchange their final goodbyes. Saeko joins her family for New Year's dinner, which will in all likelihood be their final meal. While Oyoshi and Saeko are well aware of their impending doom, Mokichi remains in denial, insisting humanity will not bring about its own destruction. Oyoshi struggles to keep her composure and play along, but Saeko breaks down and expresses the certainty that they will all be killed. Mokichi storms off to his room and watches the sunset from his balcony. He loudly declares he and his family will survive, that he will move to a summer home with his wife, that he will have a beautiful wedding for Saeko, that he will see his younger daughter Haru fulfill her dream to become a stewardess, and that he will see his son attend university, something he himself could never do. As Mokichi finally accepts the reality of the situation, he breaks down and sobs. Sanae remains at her day care center with the children whose parents could not retrieve them, and comforts them in their final moments by reading to them. The Prime Minister sits silently and dejected in a room in the National Diet Building, his efforts to preserve global peace having ultimately been in vain. At an Alliance missile base, one of the personnel agonizingly presses the button that launches a nuclear missile at Tokyo. The missile reaches and explodes over the city, the shockwave blasting apart the countless buildings like paper and causing Tokyo Bay to boil. Flame storms through the city, incinerating the ruined scraps of the metropolis. Black nuclear rain pours onto the burning city, as the ground splits open and pours forth molten lava into the streets. A terrifying mushroom cloud envelops the city and can be seen from miles away. Other major cities around the globe meet the same fate: New York, Paris, London, Moscow, and many others are wiped off the map in an instant.

Out at sea, Takano and the others on his boat witness the end of Tokyo as they see a mushroom cloud rising overhead. The captain asks the crew what they shall do next, remain at sea or return home to the remnants of Tokyo. If they return, they will contract lethal radiation sickness from the fallout, and their boat will be contaminated before they even reach the shore. Everyone remains silent, signaling a unanimous decision to return home, with which the captain agrees. Ebara comes on deck and gives everyone coffee, feigning happiness and remarking how a good cup of coffee makes him feel glad to be alive. He looks out over the sea and struggles to maintain his composure, asking why they are willingly going to their deaths if life is so good. The captain gives the order to turn back to Tokyo, where its entire crew will meet certain death. Takano and Ebara stand on deck before finally breaking down and weeping as they prepare to join their loved ones in death.

As the Diet Building sits among the scorched and molten ruins of Tokyo, the audience is reminded that this is a work of fiction that could one day become reality. Only by working together can mankind avoid this terrible fate.

Staff

Main article: The Last War/Credits.

Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the right.

Cast

Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.

  • Frankie Sakai   as   Mokichi Tamura, Tokyo Press Club limousine driver
  • Akira Takarada   as   Takano, sailor on the Kasagi Maru
  • Yuriko Hoshi   as   Saeko Tamura, Mokichi's daughter
  • Nobuko Otawa   as   Oyoshi Tamura, Mokichi's wife
  • Yumi Shirakawa   as   Sanae, Ebara's daughter
  • Chishu Ryu   as   Ebara, cook on the Kasagi Maru
  • Jerry Ito   as   Watkins, reporter
  • Eijiro Tono   as   Umehara, Captain of the Kasagi Maru
  • So Yamamura   as   Prime Minister Masaki
  • Ken Uehara   as   Minister of Foreign Affairs
  • Seizaburo Kawazu   as   Minister of Defense Suitani
  • Nobuo Nakamura   as   Chief Cabinet Secretary Fujikawa
  • Chieko Nakakita   as   Oharu
  • Minoru Takada   as   Tokyo Defense Headquarters Commander
  • Shigeki Ishida   as   Arimura
  • Naoko Sakabe   as   Suzue, Oharu's daughter
  • Kozo Nomura   as   Ishizaki
  • Masao Oda   as   Mr. Mochiya
  • Yutaka Sada   as   Reporter
  • Nadao Kirino   as   Tokyo Defense Headquarters Officer
  • Koji Uno   as   Tokyo Defense Headquarters Officer
  • Seiji Yoshida   as   Kasagi Maru sailor
  • Toshihiko Furuta   as   Helicopter crew
  • Kyoko Mori   as   Childcare worker at the day care center
  • Teruko Mita   as   Izawa, teacher at the day care center
  • Jiro Kumagai   as   Minister of Health and Welfare
  • Soji Ubukata   as   Minister of Education
  • Shiro Tsuchiya   as   Minister of Justice
  • Keiichiro Katsumoto   as   Neighbor
  • Naoya Kusakawa   as   Helicopter crew
  • Wataru Omae   as   Kasagi Maru officer
  • Yoshio Katsube   as   Reporter
  • Masaki Shinohara   as   Tokyo Defense Headquarters worker
  • Yutaka Oka   as   Tokyo Defense Headquarters worker
  • Koji Uruki   as   Mailman
  • Koji Abe   as   Ichiro Tamura, Mochiki's son
  • Yuko Tominaga   as   Haru Tamura, Mochiki's daughter
  • Yuki Shimizu   as   Female clerk at Sankamashi Electric company
  • Toshiko Nakano   as   Neighbor A
  • Tsurue Ichimanji   as   Neighbor B
  • Asami Hotaka
  • Howard Larson   as   Federal Army Staff Officer
  • Ed Keene   as   Allied Army Commander
  • Bernard Barre   as   Allied Army Maintenance Officer
  • Cliff Harrington (as Clifford Harsonton)
  • Hank Brown   as   Federal Army First Lieutenant Mark
  • Daniel Jones
  • Ben Greenhough
  • Mike Snape
  • Roy Lessard
  • Hans Horneff   as   Allied Army Missile Base Commander
  • Harold Conway   as   Federal Army Missile Base Commander
  • Osman Yusuf   as   Allied Army Correspondent
  • Yasuo Araki, Toku Ihara, Tadashi Okabe, Jun Kuroki, Hideo Shibuya, Shigemi Sunagawa, Wajiro Suzukawa, Satoru Shin'no, Bin Furuya   as   Kasagi Maru sailors (uncredited)
  • Kuniyoshi Kashima   as   Kasagi Maru helmsman (uncredited)
  • Minoru Ito, Hideo Otsuka, Saburo Kadowaki, Eisuke Nakanishi   as   Tokyo Defense Headquarters workers (uncredited)
  • Ken Echigo, Hiroshi Sekita, Masanari Nihei   as   Singers on TV (uncredited)
  • Tokio Okawa, Masayoshi Kawabe, Ikuo Kawamura, Akio Kusama, Eizaburo Komatsu   as   Tokyo Press Club drivers (uncredited)
  • Kamayuki Tsubono   as   Tokyo Press Club driver / reporter (uncredited)
  • Hiroshi Akitsu   as   Reporter (uncredited)
  • Hakuyoji Watanabe   as   Station worker (uncredited)
  • Haruo Suzuki   as   Securities trading company employee / Tokyo Defense Headquarters officer (uncredited)
  • Kazuo Hinata   as   Government official (uncredited)
  • Akira Kitchoji   as   Minister of Finance (uncredited)
  • Junpei Natsuki   as   Father coming to pick up his child (uncredited)
  • Takuya Yuki   as   Father coming to pick up his child / Tokyo Defense Headquarters worker (uncredited)
  • Yoshie Kihara, Sachiko Mori   as   Mothers coming to pick up their children (uncredited)
  • Masaaki Tachibana   as   Tour guide / reporter (uncredited)
  • Haruo Nakajima   as   Policeman guiding evacuation (uncredited)
  • Ryutaro Amami   as   Sankamashi Electric company employee / reporter / National Diet Building security guard (uncredited)
  • Masahide Matsushita   as   Securities trading company customer / station worker (uncredited)
  • Saburo Iketani   as   Announcer (uncredited)
  • Akijiro Hikari   as   Sankamashi Electric company employee (uncredited)
  • Shigeo Suzuki   as   Helicopter pilot (uncredited)
  • Ichiro Chiba   as   Evacuating man (uncredited)
  • Enver Altenbay   as   Allied Army reconnaissance crew (uncredited)
  • Rolf Jayser   as   Allied Army officer (uncredited)
  • Cump Cubens   as   Allied Army engineer (uncredited)
  • Leonard Stanford   as   Federal Army Staff Officer (uncredited)

Appearances

Weapons, vehicles, and organizations

Production

For the scenes depicting the destruction of Tokyo, Paris, Moscow, New York City, and London, Eiji Tsuburaya suggested creating miniatures out of paraffin, before it was decided to use wafers. In a 1996 interview, miniature builder Yoshio Irie recalled, "Since the destruction of the world's cities was going to be such a crucial element of [The Last War], we tried to find a substance that would produce especially convincing results when blown up. We experimented with many different materials, but found that wafers worked best. Unfortunately, we also found that mice liked to eat the wafers."[3] In order to ward off the mice, several of the miniatures were hung and filmed upside down, which had the added effect of making them appear to be blasted high into the air.[3]

Gallery

Main article: The Last War/Gallery.

Soundtrack

Main article: The Last War/Soundtrack.

Alternate titles

  • World War III: Tokyo's Last Day (第三次世界大戦 東京最後の日,   Daisanji Sekai Taisen: Tōkyō Saigo no Hi, early Japanese title)[4]
    • (㐧三次世界大戦 東京最後の日,   Daisanji Sekai Taisen, alternate spelling)[5]
  • The Final War (La Guerra Final; Mexico)
  • Last War (L'ultima guerra, Italy)
  • Death-Rays from Outer Space (Todesstrahlen aus dem Weltall; West Germany)
  • The Last War of the Apocalypse (La Dernière Guerre de l'Apocalypse; France)
  • The Last Day of the World (O Último Dia do Mundo; Brazil)

Theatrical releases

View all posters for the film here.

Foreign releases

Ad for The Last War in The Honolulu Advertiser
Hong Kong ad for the English dub of The Last War

The Last War had its first known international showing at the Nippon Theatre in Honolulu, Hawaii, on December 29, 1961, in Japanese with English subtitles. Regular showings at the Nippon began on January 3, 1962, with the Queen Theater playing it in May.[2][6] While the film was originally released in Japan with overture music, in the English subtitled print shown in Honolulu this overture music was used as underscore for a text scroll "preface" over a red background first mentioned in the review in The Honolulu Advertiser.[7] The text of the preface appeared earlier in a fold-out as part of Toho's extensive multi-page trade ad appearing in the first few pages of the October 23, 1961 issue of the major American trade magazine, Boxoffice.[8] The scroll with music is shown before the Toho logo on home video presentations of the international trailer.[9]

Despite Toho only two days after the film's premiere revealing their interest in showing the film in the United States, Europe and the Soviet Union in an AP story vividly describing the film's climax,[10] The Last War received very little known theatrical distribution outside of East and South Asia and no wide theatrical release in the United States. An uncut English language international dub commissioned by Toho[11] and realized by William Ross's Tokyo-based Frontier Enterprises[12] received its first known public screenings in Hong Kong in March 1962.[13] This release was successful enough that the film was brought back in June of that year with advertised 4-track stereophonic sound, just like the original Japanese release,[14][15] in a very early example of an English dubbed film released in true stereo. The international English dub was then shown in Singapore in November of the same year.[16]

At the end of November, the international English dub was released in India with a newspaper ad featuring an enthusiastic recommendation by then-current (and first post-independence) Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.[17] The Indian release was a monumental, record-breaking[18] eight-week run[19] that led to the import of more Toho films to India, with newspaper ads recalling Toho as the "makers of The Last War" and the company "who gave you The Last War" years after the successful Indian run.[20][21][22]

Though the mono version of the unique trailer made for Toho's international English dub has been included on Japanese home video releases, the actual dub has yet to be released in the United States or appear on any home video format anywhere in the world in either of its mono or 4-track stereo versions.

U.S. release

Drive-in ad for The Last War in The Los Angeles Times
Video Gems ad for The Last War

On October 17, 1961, nine days after the domestic premiere of The Last War, Toho offered the film's U.S. distribution rights up for bid. Columbia and Paramount were among the interested parties.[23] In November 1961, Pacific Stars and Stripes reported that MGM was due to release the film sometime in March 1962.[24] This MGM release never materialized.

The Last War was ultimately acquired for distribution in the United States by producers Stanley Meyer and Edward L. Alperson's foreign importing firm[25] Brenco Pictures Corporation. Stanley Meyer was creatively responsible for Brenco's English dubs of this film, The Human Vapor and Gorath. Reports in The Hollywood Reporter and Variety throughout 1962 illustrate a timeline in which Meyer acquired and started dubbing a Japanese film in June 1962,[26] bought and started dubbing a second Japanese film that October,[27] and then accompanied Alperson to meet with film executives in Tokyo in November,[28] presumably to strike a deal for a third Japanese film. There is no mention in trade magazines in 1962 or 1963 of Meyer dubbing a third Japanese film.

The presence of stock footage inserts and music from The Last War in Brenco's cut of Gorath leads to the inescapable conclusion that The Last War was acquired before or while the editing of Gorath was in progress and used to pad that film. Brenco then put their Americanization of The Last War on hiatus until after multiple unsuccessful test screenings, previews, and recuts of Gorath and an underwhelming box office performance for that film's release as part of a package with The Human Vapor in its initial territories of Southern California, Arizona, and Hawaii in 1964.

Stanley Meyer either rejected, or was not supplied with, the international English dub of The Last War[29] and signed prolific voice actor Marvin Miller on to dub the film. In late November 1964 Meyer challenged Miller to dub all 51 male speaking roles - a record for the time - to which Miller acquiesced.[30] Like his previous English dubs of The Human Vapor and Gorath, Meyer hired future music editor and John Williams collaborator Kenneth Wannberg to edit the film in another of his earliest film industry jobs. Thirty-one minutes were removed in total.

The film was restructured to be told in flashback by Takano, during the Kasagi Maru's doomed return voyage to Tokyo, a narrative technique also employed in Meyer and Wannberg's edit of The Human Vapor and many other previous Americanizations of Toho films. Several subplots were removed, namely the entire character of Watkins and his interactions with the Tamura family, Mokichi at his job at the press center and his investments in the stock market, Prime Minister Masaki's poor health condition, and casual discussion between the staff at the Federal Army Missile Base. Japanese customs that would appear unfamiliar to U.S. audiences, such as Children's Day, were given mild exposition in the narration by Takano. Many scenes that were left silent in Toho's version were scored with repeats of other cues from the soundtrack, most often the main title cue. The Japanese folk song "New Year's Day", sung by the children at Sanae's day care, was replaced with the Sherman Brothers' song "It's a Small World." An excerpt of a speech by former U.S. President John F. Kennedy was used as an analogue for the ending text in Toho's version.

It has long been written that Brenco intended to release this U.S. version theatrically, but that it didn't see the light of day until its TV syndication through Heritage Enterprises. This is actually not the case. In November 1968, The Last War was shown at two drive-in theaters in Bakersfield, California, 100 miles north of Los Angeles, where Brenco's previous two Toho films were also previewed and premiered. It was the headliner of a triple feature with Fernando Lamas' The Violent Ones and an unreported third film. The triple feature was first shown at the Edison Drive-In from November 13 to 17, and then played at the South Chester Drive-In six miles away between November 18 and 19.[31][32] No other theatrical screenings have been identified as of now.

Brenco's distribution rights and the film elements were transferred to Heritage Enterprises in 1972, and they entered the film into U.S. television syndication in a 4:3 version, with the earliest known TV listings appearing in 1975.[33] Brenco's 60-second TV spot was reused, and their longer theatrical trailer was cropped to 4:3 and repurposed as a TV trailer. Video Gems released Brenco's edited version of the film to VHS and Betamax in 1985,[34] which remain the only official home video releases of the film in the United States to this day. The film elements along with streaming and home video rights currently rest, ironically, with MGM through the Brenco films' inclusion in the Samuel Goldwyn library.

Box office

The Last War earned ¥284.99 million in distributor rentals during its 1961 theatrical run, making it Toho's third-highest-earning film of the year and the tenth-highest-earning Japanese film of the year.[1]

Video releases

Video Gems VHS (1985)

  • Tapes: 1
  • Audio: English

Toho VHS (1991)

  • Tapes: 1
  • Audio: Japanese

Toho DVD (2004/2015)

  • Region: 2
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: Japanese
  • Subtitles: Japanese
  • Special features: Audio commentary by Shue Matsubayashi, export trailer, gallery of stills and the theatrical pamphlet
  • Notes: The 2015 re-release includes an 8-page booklet; it is unclear if the 2004 release does as well.[35]

Though The Last War is not available on Blu-ray, an HD version of the film can be rented or purchased on the Japanese version of Prime Video.

Videos

Japanese trailer (reconstruction)
International trailer
Textless international trailer
U.S. TV trailer
U.S. TV trailer

Trivia

References

This is a list of references for The Last War. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Aoki 2012, p. 180
  2. 2.0 2.1 Gima 1961, p. 17
    The Last War Honolulu Star Bulletin Thu Dec 28 1961 .jpg
  3. 3.0 3.1 Ragone 2014, p. 65
  4. Asai 2012, p. 60.
  5. Suzuki 2012, p. 60.
  6. Ito 1962, p. B-4
    The Last War The Honolulu Advertiser Mon May 7 1962 .jpg
  7. Carlson 1962, p. 10: "IN A PREFACE, the movie-makers declare their neutrality in the Cold War. They say they "are inimical to no one," but simply interested in serving the cause of world peace."
  8. Shlyen 1961, pp. 2-6.
  9. SpaceHunterM (8 December 2016). "The Last War (1961) - International English Trailer (480p)". YouTube.
  10. The Bridgeport Post 1961, p. 16.
  11. Toho c. 1962, p. 82.
  12. Homenick, Brett (2 August 2012). "G-FEST XIX". Sidelong Glances of a Pigeon Kicker.
  13. South China Morning Post 1962a, p. 4: "IN ENGLISH DIALOGUE"
  14. South China Morning Post 1962b, p. 5: "–TO-MORROW– "The Last War?" English Version ● TohoScope Eastman Color"
  15. South China Morning Post 1962c, p. 4: "In Added Wonder of 4-Track Stereophonic Sound"
  16. The Straits Times 1962, p. 4.
  17. The Times of India 1962a, p. 3: "THE LAST WAR is a unique pictorial record that dares to reveal in shocking detail as to what will happen to the world if a nuclear war breaks out. It will be the last war of the world, marking the complete annihilation of mankind! – Jawaharlal Nehru"
  18. The Times of India 1962b, p. 2: "2nd Week! Destined to break all records in Bombay! A truly unique picture specially recommended by the Prime Minister"
  19. The Times of India 1963, p. 3: "8th and Final Week!"
  20. The Times of India 1964a, p. 2: "TOHO FILMS, Makers of "The Last War" now present THE THREE TREASURES"
  21. The Times of India 1964b, p. 2: "Another Masterpiece from the Makers of "THE LAST WAR""
  22. The Times of India 1965, p. 3: "Toho Co. who gave you 'The Last War' 'Tokyo by Night, Interpol Code 8' [sic] 'High & Low' now presents its fantastic and Action-packed Science-fiction drama SPACE MONSTER DOGORA"
  23. Variety 1961, p. 15.
  24. Ricketts 1961, p. 11.
  25. Dutra 1962, p. 18: ""Irma La Douce" [...] also will be included as part of the Alperson-Meyer production unit. In the deal made with Wallace, Alperson and Meyer offered the author a participation in the world gross of the film, [...] plus a stock participation deal in their foreign import company, Brenco Pictures Corp."
  26. Connolly 1962a, p. 2.
  27. Connolly 1962b, p. 2.
  28. Variety 1962, p. 16.
  29. Carrozza 2021, p. 108.
  30. Noe 1964, p. 14.
  31. The Los Angeles Times 1968a, p. 85.
  32. The Los Angeles Times 1968b, p. 85.
  33. Daily Press 1975, p. 177.
  34. Furtaw 1992, p. 1459.
  35. "世界大戦争 [東宝DVD名作セレクション]". Amazon.co.jp. 15 July 2015.

Bibliography

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