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In the film of World War II filmed in Japan, there is a scene that makes people angry. Which shot is it?
A Japanese film "The Battle of Archimedes" released last year met with international madness. Perhaps readers are not necessarily familiar with this film. The Archimedes War is a film with the theme of World War II. Not only that, he also won the box office champion in Japan. It is reported that this film describes the story of Japan building the battleship "Yamato" before the Pacific War.

We are all familiar with the battleship Yamato. It is the warship with the largest displacement and the largest caliber equipped with artillery in the world. It is the peak product of the era of ju pao. Equipped with 9 powerful 460mm caliber guns, the protection ability is excellent. It has always been regarded as the most powerful warship in the world. However, during World War II, naval tactics changed greatly, and battleships could no longer dominate the battlefield. However, the Japanese navy is still stubborn.

Although the battleship Yamato was the most powerful warship in the world at that time, it had nothing to do after its service. Therefore, the Yamato did not achieve much success in World War II. In the end, at 1945, as the biggest bait in the "special attack of gathering water", it attracted the attack of the US aircraft carrier and was eventually sunk.

This work describes in detail the story of Zhi Zhi, a talented mathematician known as "Archimedes of Japan". After discovering the hidden conspiracy in the Japanese navy's shipbuilding plan, he was determined to correct the unhealthy trend in the state machine. Although it sounds inspiring, this film beautifies Japanese aggression. In fact, in recent years, movies and cartoons about the old Japanese navy have emerged one after another, and some even whitewashed the Japanese navy, saying that they did not commit war atrocities. In fact, some archives show that at least 1.25 million British sailors and 7500 Australians were killed by the Japanese navy during World War II.

One of the most famous examples is that the Japanese navy cruiser Reagan brutally killed 85 people on board after sinking the British merchant ship Behar. After the submarine "I-8" sank the merchant ship "Tejisalak", it tortured the crew on board, threw the captured crew into the propeller and hanged them alive, even tied them to the submarine deck, and let the submarine dive to the bottom of the sea to drown these people.

In the film Yamato, which was previously shown in Japan, the Japanese people inserted a real documentary image with ulterior motives, a picture of a suicide attack by Kamikaze special forces, with subtitles, saying: We live in the future of Japan where they are betting on life protection. This move was protested by many countries in the world, and even the United States could not stand it. However, the final screening edition had no choice but to delete this picture, which shows Japan's sinister intentions.