

A squadron of Japanese Self-Defense Force soldiers find themselves transported through time to their country's warring states era, when rival samurai clans were battling to become the supreme Shogun.
Acting
Sonny Chiba's unhinged charisma carries everything.
Practical Effects
Real tanks, real explosions, real stuntmen eating dirt.
Direction
Saitō commits to the premise with zero irony.

Director
Kōsei Saitō
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Released during Japan's economic boom, the film anxiously interrogates military expansion—ironic given the JSDF's constitutional limitations. The tank becomes a symbol of repressed national aggression.
Sonny Chiba performed his own horse stunts, including the final charge—he broke two ribs and finished the scene anyway. That's not method acting, that's just being Sonny Chiba.
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Reactions from the web
Imagine how much quality stuff like this is just sitting in the shelves somewhere.
@FrontalAssaultRecords 2276
This is type of film you watched at 2 AM, and you are never able to find it again
@Chrysamer77 118
"I will not let history destroy me" is a crazy line.
@WELLbethere 1300
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