I'll Remember April (1999 film)

Summary

I'll Remember April is a 1999 American family drama film starring Pat Morita, Pam Dawber, Haley Joel Osment, Mark Harmon and Yuki Tokuhiro. It was directed by Bob Clark.

I'll Remember April
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBob Clark
Written byMark Sanderson
Produced byPaul Colichman
David Forrest
Mark R. Harris
Mark Headley
Sam Irvin
StarringPat Morita
Trevor Morgan
Pam Dawber
Haley Joel Osment
Mark Harmon
CinematographyStephen M. Katz
Music byPaul Zaza
Distributed byRegent Entertainment
Pioneer Entertainment
Release date
  • April 5, 1999 (1999-04-05)
Running time
90 min.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot edit

Four children capture a Japanese soldier (Yuji Okumoto) who washes ashore during the Second World War.

Although the horrors of World War II are far removed from the Pacific Coast community where adolescent Duke Cooper (Trevor Morgan) and his three best chums play soldier, experiment with swearing, and earnestly patrol the beach for Japanese submarines, the realities of the war are about to come crashing down around them. Not when a Japanese soldier, stranded and wounded when his sub quickly dived, washes ashore; his capture by the foursome merely allows for more playtime and thoughts of becoming heroes. It's coming because Duke's older brother is on some island awaiting combat and the black sedans with military tags have already begun rolling through town to deliver their grim announcements. And Duke's Japanese American pal Willie Tanaka (Yuki Tokuhiro), all three feet and 55 pounds of him, has suddenly become a threat to national security, so he, his mother, and grandfather are soon to be shipped away to an internment camp.

Trivia edit

  • The movie was named after the jazz standard of the same name, originally written by Gene de Paul, Patricia Johnston and Don Raye.
  • According to an interview on The Tonight Show, Michael Cera also tried out for the part of Peewee[1]
  • The Train scenes were filmed at the since been closed Fillmore & Western railroad in Fillmore California.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ ""The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien" Michael Cera/Aziz Ansari/OK Go (TV Episode 2010) - IMDb". IMDb.

External links edit