In Harp of Burma death surrounds the group of soldiers as they try and complete their mission during WWII. It's not realized until the end, where you find out why one of the soldiers stays back instead of returning home with his comrades. He stays back as a traveling monk to give all of the fallen soldiers a proper burial, and he says that it may take him his entire lifetime to complete, but he believes that was the reason he was sent to Burma. The amount of bodies shown were endless, and they were all rotting out in the open with nobody to care for them. The Japanese soldiers that died at the American hospital were all buried together with no names on the tombstone, and a quick prayer service was given to them. During war, death is to be expected, but one cannot understand how bad unless one was there to experience it in war itself.
![]() |
Taken from houseofanime.org |
The movie Letters From Iwo Jima covered death as well, but in an entirely different view. They had a scene where a soldier was blinded by a grenade, and instead of trying to survive with all his might, he committed suicide. It may seem like a coward's way out, but his actions were for his comrades and Japan. He didn't want to hinder the unit's mobility which would be a great disadvantage for them, and he didn't want to be captured as a POW by the Americans and be forced to give information about the unit's missions and tactical strategies. Another scene was where the captain who was wounded and trying to escape called it quits and asked his assistant to behead him. This plan failed when an American killed the assistant as he was about to give the death blow, but then a soldier who owed his life to the captain 3 times over came along and helped him commit suicide with his own Colt .45. This aspect was a way of dying with honor on his homeland of Japan. These are all aspects of death that are carried out in different ways, and eventually we will see these aspects of death during our lifetime, that's because death is just a part of life.