Saturday, September 25, 2010

Watch Free Online The Last Message: Umizaru 2010 Japanese Movie Watch Latest Japan The Last Message: Umizaru Film Video, Download,Review Cast

The Last Message: Umizaru Japanese movie 2010
Japanese: THE LAST MESSAGE 海猿


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Cast and Crew
Cast:Hideaki Ito,Ai Kato,
Ryuta Sato,Masaya Kato,Kazue Fukiishi,
Shohei Miura,Gaku Hamada,Saburo Tokito

Director:
Eiichiro Hasumi
Writer: Yasushi Fukuda
Producer: Eiichirou Hasumi, Hirotsugu Usui
Release Date: September 18, 2010
Runtime: 129min.
Distributor: Toho
Language: Japanese
Country: Japan

Japanese movie online Japan movie online Romance movie Romantic movie online movie movie movie review movie story free The Last Message: Umizaru Japanese Japan Film The film Directed by Eiichiro Hasumi.

The Story:
While a menacing typhoon approaches, an accident at the giant natural gas plant Regalia occurs. Japan Coast Guard rescue divers Daisuke Senzaki (Hideaki Ito), Tetsuya Yoshioka (Ryuta Sato) and engineer Hiroshiichirou Sakuragi (Masaya Kato) head together to the gas plant. During their rescue efforts an explosion occurs that traps Daisuke, Natsu Nishizawa Kazue Fukiishi and worker Hisayoneo Kizima (Gaku Hamada). Daisuke then looks for a way out for his party with a man he just meets Takuya Hotori. Because of the typhoon, even a helicopter cannot approach the Regalia.
Meanwhile, at the head office of the Japan Coast Guard, the Japanese coast guard tries to find a way to rescue the trapped people, but the government officials put national interests first. Tension arises between these two parties. Daisuke’s wife Tamakisai Senzaki (Ai Kato) prays for the safe return of Daisuke not only for her sake, but for their new born son.
Daisuke’s party is still trapped in the giant plant have one last choice .A small team of Coast Guard divers, including Daisuke, rappels onto the ship from a helicopter and begins to evacuate the panicked passengers. Then Daisuke finds a familiar face – Kanna. They had a tiff the night before about their wedding plans – Kanna had already made her dress, while Daisuke was still reluctant to propose – and she left for Tokyo, feeling like a fool. Now she see Daisuke in a different, more heroic light – but before they can properly reconcile, she has to evacuate, while Daisuke searches for stray passengers.


He finds two – a pregnant woman (Ohtsuka Nene) and an excitable man (Fukikoshi Mitsuru) who reluctant to leave his expensive foreign car. Through a series of mishaps, Daisuke, his pal and fellow diver Tetsuya (Sato Ryuta), and the two passengers end up trapped on the ship, as the water seeps in from below and the flames roar above.
The Coast Guard swings into action to save this quartet, but despite the presence of dozens of Guardsmen, the rescue operation does not go smoothly. Who can save them?
The Last Message: Umizaru Movie Review:
A private showing of upcoming movie “THE LAST MESSAGE Umizaru” was held on the 26th and cast members greeted the audience.

“THE LAST MESSAGE Umizaru” is the conclusion of the “Umizaru” series, which is a story about shipwreck rescues and other incidents in the sea and it has been 4 years since the release of the last movie in 2006.

The cast members are, Ito Hideaki, Kato Ai, Sato Ryuta, Tokito Saburo, Kato Masaya, Fukiishi Kazue, Miura Shohei and Hamada Gaku. In addition, 100 Coast Guard Officers from the Japanese Coast Guard also appeared at the showing and celebrated the completion of the movie with the cast members.

The public release of the movie will be on September 18th in both 2D and 3D.Not to be outdone by Pandora’s spear-wielding warriors, Japanese movie studio Toho Co. Ltd announced plans to bring Japanese audiences the country’s first domestically produced 3-D movie.Toho, the movie distributor that introduced the world to Godzilla, will release the final chapter of “Umizaru,” a three-part series based on a popular manga collection, in 3-D this September. “Umizaru” translates into “sea monkeys,” the name assigned to the group of trainees looking to join the elite rescue diving squad in the Japanese Coast Guard. Toho is teaming up with Fuji Television, which will head up the movie’s production.

But the push to be counted among the James Camerons and Tim Burtons of the 3-D cinema circle is an expensive undertaking. Toho declined to reveal the project’s production cost but said the plan increased the movie’s original budget by 50%, according to Agence France-Press.

Toho’s decision to enter the 3-D market follows the wild success of three-dimensional blockbusters “Avatar” and “Alice in Wonderland” in Japan. The Red Queen continues to enjoy her uninterrupted reign over Japanese box offices, claiming the No. 1 spot for the fifth week, while “Avatar” commanded the top spot for 10 consecutive weeks after its late December release in Japan, according to movie-tracking website Box Office Mojo.

“Umizaru” is no movie theater lightweight — the film’s second installment was the biggest money-maker among Japanese live-action films in 2006, the year it was released. But while the upcoming film is loaded with similar storyboard conventions that forecast another success, a hunky male lead aboard a sinking ship may not induce the same kind of excitement unless he jumps off the screen like the Na’vi. The extra boost in potential profits that a 3-D movie could deliver makes the project’s swelling cost seem like a worthy investment. According to Box Office Mojo, “Avatar” has collected $164 million here, the second-highest grossing overseas country for the film after China as of the end of April, more than double the 7.1 billion yen ($77 million) “Umizaru” part deux pulled in four years ago.

In a country where ticket prices are already considerably higher compared with movie theaters overseas, the success of “Avatar” and “Alice in Wonderland” show that Japanese moviegoers aren’t deterred by the added charge to watch a movie in 3-D. In Tokyo, it costs 2,100 yen ($23) for one adult ticket to watch “Avatar,” 300 yen more than admission to a non-3-D film. The average U.S. ticket price for a 3-D movie is slightly under $15, while it costs close to $11 for your standard 2-D experience.

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