Pearl Harbor - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Pearl Harbor"
Pearl Harbor (2001)
Timing: 3:3 (183 min)
Pearl Harbor - TMDB rating
6.936/10
6941
Pearl Harbor - Kinopoisk rating
7.92/10
222308
Pearl Harbor - IMDB rating
6.3/10
368000

Actors and characters

Photo Ben Affleck #5708Photo Ben Affleck #5709Photo Ben Affleck #5710Photo Ben Affleck #5711

Ben Affleck

Ben Affleck
Character Rafe McCawley
Photo Kate Beckinsale #42012Photo Kate Beckinsale #42013Photo Kate Beckinsale #42014Photo Kate Beckinsale #42015

Kate Beckinsale

Kate Beckinsale
Character Evelyn Johnson
Photo Josh Hartnett #2830Photo Josh Hartnett #2831Photo Josh Hartnett #2832Photo Josh Hartnett #2833

Josh Hartnett

Josh Hartnett
Character Danny Walker
Photo Cuba Gooding Jr. #1685Photo Cuba Gooding Jr. #1686Photo Cuba Gooding Jr. #1687

Cuba Gooding Jr.

Cuba Gooding Jr.
Character Doris Miller
Photo Jon Voight #26405Photo Jon Voight #26406Photo Jon Voight #26407Photo Jon Voight #26408

Jon Voight

Jon Voight
Character Franklin D. Roosevelt
Photo Tom Sizemore #22045Photo Tom Sizemore #22046

Tom Sizemore

Tom Sizemore
Character Earl Sistern
Photo Alec Baldwin #21879Photo Alec Baldwin #21880Photo Alec Baldwin #21881Photo Alec Baldwin #21882

Alec Baldwin

Alec Baldwin
Character James Doolittle
Photo Ewen Bremner #30681Photo Ewen Bremner #30682Photo Ewen Bremner #30683Photo Ewen Bremner #30684

Ewen Bremner

Ewen Bremner
Character Red Winkle
Photo William Lee Scott #43136Photo William Lee Scott #43137

William Lee Scott

William Lee Scott
Character Billy Thompson
Greg Zola
Character Anthony Fusco
Photo Jaime King #21507Photo Jaime King #21508Photo Jaime King #21509Photo Jaime King #21510

Jaime King

Jaime King
Character Betty Bayer
Photo Sara Rue #43139Photo Sara Rue #43140Photo Sara Rue #43141Photo Sara Rue #43142

Sara Rue

Sara Rue
Character Martha
Photo Michael Shannon #5627Photo Michael Shannon #5628Photo Michael Shannon #5629Photo Michael Shannon #5630

Michael Shannon

Michael Shannon
Character Gooz Wood
Photo Dan Aykroyd #30168Photo Dan Aykroyd #30169Photo Dan Aykroyd #30170Photo Dan Aykroyd #30171

Dan Aykroyd

Dan Aykroyd
Character Captain Thurman
Photo Colm Feore #22177Photo Colm Feore #22178Photo Colm Feore #69977

Colm Feore

Colm Feore
Character Admiral Kimmel
Photo Mako #43143Photo Mako #43144

Mako

Mako
Character Isoroku Yamamoto
Photo John Fujioka #43145

John Fujioka

John Fujioka
Character Nishikura
Photo Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa #11094

Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa

Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
Character Cmdr. Minoru Genda
Photo Jesse James #42920Photo Jesse James #42921Photo Jesse James #72090Photo Jesse James #72091

Jesse James

Jesse James
Character Young Rafe
Photo Reiley McClendon #43146Photo Reiley McClendon #43147Photo Reiley McClendon #43148Photo Reiley McClendon #43149

Reiley McClendon

Reiley McClendon
Character Young Danny
Photo William Fichtner #12031Photo William Fichtner #12032Photo William Fichtner #251826Photo William Fichtner #251827

William Fichtner

William Fichtner
Character Danny's Father
Photo Steve Rankin #38036

Steve Rankin

Steve Rankin
Character Rafe's Father
Photo Brian Haley #43152Photo Brian Haley #43153

Brian Haley

Brian Haley
Character Training Captain
Photo Graham Beckel #34761Photo Graham Beckel #34762

Graham Beckel

Graham Beckel
Character Chester W. Nimitz
Will Bowden
Character British Pilot
Photo Angel Sing #43154
Angel Sing
Character Japanese Aide
Photo Rufus Dorsey #27318
Rufus Dorsey
Character Dorie's Friend
Photo David Hornsby #39860

David Hornsby

David Hornsby
Character Flyer with Murmur
Photo Scott Wilson #43158Photo Scott Wilson #43159

Scott Wilson

Scott Wilson
Character George Marshall
Photo Howard Mungo #43160
Howard Mungo
Character George
Photo Randy Oglesby #43161
Randy Oglesby
Character Strategic Analyst
Photo Ping Wu #43162
Ping Wu
Character Japanese Officer
Stan Cahill
Character Pentagon Lieutenant
Photo Tom Everett #19977

Tom Everett

Tom Everett
Character Frank Knox
Photo Tomas Arana #43163Photo Tomas Arana #43164

Tomas Arana

Tomas Arana
Character Frank J. Fletcher
Photo Beth Grant #35869Photo Beth Grant #35870Photo Beth Grant #35871Photo Beth Grant #35872

Beth Grant

Beth Grant
Character Motherly Secretary
Photo Sung Kang #3440Photo Sung Kang #3441Photo Sung Kang #3442Photo Sung Kang #3443

Sung Kang

Sung Kang
Character Listener
Photo Raphael Sbarge #5522

Raphael Sbarge

Raphael Sbarge
Character Kimmel's Aide
Photo Marty Belafsky #43165
Marty Belafsky
Character Louie
Photo Yuji Okumoto #10885

Yuji Okumoto

Yuji Okumoto
Character Japanese Shy Bomber
Josh Green
Character Ellis
Photo Ian Bohen #34767

Ian Bohen

Ian Bohen
Character Radar Operator #2
Photo Michael Milhoan #43166

Michael Milhoan

Michael Milhoan
Character Army Commander
Photo Peter Firth #43167

Peter Firth

Peter Firth
Character Mervyn Bennion
Marco Gould
Character Pop-Up Sailor
Photo Nicholas Downs #43169Photo Nicholas Downs #43170Photo Nicholas Downs #43171

Nicholas Downs

Nicholas Downs
Character Terrified Sailor
Photo Tim Choate #43172

Tim Choate

Tim Choate
Character Navy Doctor
Photo John Diehl #43173Photo John Diehl #43174

John Diehl

John Diehl
Character Senior Doctor
Photo Joseph Patrick Kelly #28498
Joseph Patrick Kelly
Character Medic
Photo Ron Harper #43175
Ron Harper
Character Minister
Photo Ted McGinley #43176Photo Ted McGinley #43177Photo Ted McGinley #43178

Ted McGinley

Ted McGinley
Character Army Major
Photo Madison Mason #17883

Madison Mason

Madison Mason
Character Raymond Spruance
Photo Kim Coates #43179Photo Kim Coates #43180Photo Kim Coates #43181

Kim Coates

Kim Coates
Character Jack Richards
Photo Glenn Morshower #38353Photo Glenn Morshower #38354

Glenn Morshower

Glenn Morshower
Character William Halsey Jr.
Paul Francis
Character Doolittle Co-Pilot

Scott Wiper

Scott Wiper
Character Ripley
Rod Biermann
Character Navigator
Noriaki Kamata
Character Japanese Soldier
Photo Garret Sato #40894Photo Garret Sato #40895

Garret Sato

Garret Sato
Character Japanese Soldier

Eiji Inoue

Eiji Inoue
Character Japanese Soldier
Photo Precious Chong #43183

Precious Chong

Precious Chong
Character Nursing Supervisor
Photo Jeff Wadlow #72119Photo Jeff Wadlow #72120

Jeff Wadlow

Jeff Wadlow
Character Next Guy in Line
Will Gill Jr.
Character Train Conductor
Photo Seth Sakai #43184
Seth Sakai
Character Japanese Tourist
Photo Curtis Andersen #43185
Curtis Andersen
Character Eighteen-Year-Old Typist
Blaine Pate
Character Orderly in Aftermath
Photo John Pyper-Ferguson #39601Photo John Pyper-Ferguson #39602

John Pyper-Ferguson

John Pyper-Ferguson
Character Naval Officer in Hospital
Toru Tanaka Jr.
Character Samoan Bouncer
Photo Sean Gunn #5816Photo Sean Gunn #5817Photo Sean Gunn #5818Photo Sean Gunn #5819

Sean Gunn

Sean Gunn
Character Traction Sailor
Photo Josh Ackerman #43186

Josh Ackerman

Josh Ackerman
Character Wounded Sailor #1
Matt Casper
Character Wounded Sailor
Photo David Kaufman #43187

David Kaufman

David Kaufman
Character Young Nervous Doctor
Photo Lindsey Ginter #43188
Lindsey Ginter
Character Captain Low
Photo Guy Torry #43189

Guy Torry

Guy Torry
Character Teeny Mayfield
Photo Leland Orser #22130Photo Leland Orser #22131

Leland Orser

Leland Orser
Character Major Jackson
Photo Peter James Smith #43190
Peter James Smith
Character Mission listener
Photo Pat Healy #9640Photo Pat Healy #9641Photo Pat Healy #9642

Pat Healy

Pat Healy
Character Newsreel Guy
Photo Thomas Wilson Brown #43191
Thomas Wilson Brown
Character Young Flier
Photo Chad Morgan #37478

Chad Morgan

Chad Morgan
Character Nurse
Photo James Saito #43192

James Saito

James Saito
Character Japanese Aide
Tak Kubota
Character Japanese Aide
Photo Robert Jayne #43193
Robert Jayne
Character Sunburnt Sailor
Photo Vic Chao #29884

Vic Chao

Vic Chao
Character Japanese Doctor
Photo Frederick Koehler #43194Photo Frederick Koehler #43195

Frederick Koehler

Frederick Koehler
Character Wounded Sailor
Photo Ben Easter #43196
Ben Easter
Character Baja Sailor
Photo Cory Tucker #43197Photo Cory Tucker #43198
Cory Tucker
Character Baja Sailor
Abe Sylvia
Character Baja Sailor
Jason Liggett
Character Baja Sailor
Photo Bret Roberts #43199
Bret Roberts
Character Baja Sailor
Photo Sean Faris #43200

Sean Faris

Sean Faris
Character Danny's Gunner
Photo Nicholas Farrell #43201

Nicholas Farrell

Nicholas Farrell
Character RAF Squadron Leader
Photo Tony Curran #30540Photo Tony Curran #30541Photo Tony Curran #30542

Tony Curran

Tony Curran
Character Ian
Photo Daniel Mays #43202

Daniel Mays

Daniel Mays
Character Pilot
Photo Toshi Toda #43203
Toshi Toda
Character Dentist
Photo Jaymee Ong #43204
Jaymee Ong
Character Dental Assistant
Photo Lisa Ross #43205
Lisa Ross
Character Nurse (uncredited)
Photo Max Thayer #43206

Max Thayer

Max Thayer
Character Bit Part (uncredited)
Photo Camille Carida #43207

Camille Carida

Camille Carida
Character Nurse (uncredited)
Photo Tanya Dempsey #43209
Tanya Dempsey
Character Nurse (uncredited)
Frieda Jane
Character Nurse (uncredited)
Kathleen Mullan
Character Stearn Nurse (uncredited)
Photo Lin Oeding #11912

Lin Oeding

Lin Oeding
Character Japanese Sailor (uncredited)
Photo Barbara Scolaro #43211
Barbara Scolaro
Character Josephine Doolittle (uncredited)
Melissa Anne Young
Character Nurse (uncredited)
Scott Levy
Character Sergeant (uncredited)
J Michael Briggs
Character Injured Marine (uncredited)
Photo Sam Arnold #305718
Sam Arnold
Character Lieutenant Miller (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, and Gwyneth Paltrow were initially considered for the three lead roles. Due to commitments to other projects, two of them were forced to decline the offers. However, Matt Damon appears in a cameo as a shooter firing a machine gun during the Japanese attack. The actor agreed to this participation in the project for free, as a sign of respect for Michael Bay.
  • The role of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was initially offered to Gene Hackman. Only after his refusal was John Voight invited.
  • Kevin Costner was offered the role of Colonel James Doolittle, but he turned down the offer.
  • One of the roles in the film could have gone to Adrien Brody.
  • Ashton Kutcher vied for the role of Danny Walker, but Josh Hartnett was ultimately chosen.
  • The role of Rafa McCauley could have gone to James Marsden and James Caviezel.
  • Charlize Theron turned down the lead female role in the film, opting instead for the drama "Sweet November" (2001).
  • The original title of the screenplay was "Tennessee." Disney Studios acquired it for two million dollars. In the initial version, both main characters were fighter pilots on the aircraft carrier "Tennessee."
  • Before filming began on Pearl Harbor, a Hawaiian priest blessed the film crew. This practice is recommended by local customs when filming movies in the Hawaiian Islands.
  • To better prepare for his role, Alec Baldwin spent considerable time on flight simulators at Fort Rucker, Alabama.
  • It took eight weeks to build the model of the battleship "Oklahoma." During its capsizing, 150 people were knocked off their feet or left suspended in the air.
  • To depict and film the capsizing of the battleship 'Oklahoma', the world's largest articulated mechanism was constructed.
  • The battleship 'Missouri', permanently docked at Pearl Harbor, was used to film several American battleships in the movie. All changes were limited to altering the ship's name on the life vests.
  • Scenes of the countryside in Tennessee were filmed in the Californian town of Soomis, an hour's drive from Los Angeles. To make the location more like Tennessee, corn was planted in the field five months before filming.
  • The filming of the bombing scenes was conducted under the supervision of the Environmental Protection Agency.
  • The film crew used 700 dynamite charges, over 600 meters of detonating cord, and over 15,000 liters of gasoline to ignite 6 ships.
  • It took 106 days to film the movie.
  • During filming, airplanes flew over an abandoned military base in California. This caused panic among local residents, who believed that real combat operations had begun.
  • Unlike the earlier film 'Tora! Tora! Tora!' (1970), which was also dedicated to the attack on Pearl Harbor, actual Japanese 'Mitsubishi Zero' fighters were used. A total of three fighters were involved – one located at the 'Planes of Fame Museum' in Chino, California, the second at the 'Museum of Flight' in Santa Monica, California, and the third owned by the 'Commemorative Air Force', based in Texas. In the film 'Tora! Tora! Tora!', accurate replicas were used, constructed for the US Army during World War II. Thirty years later, some of them were used again during the filming of 'Pearl Harbor'.
  • While searching for suitable locations, the producers concluded that the American city of Gary, Indiana, most closely resembled Tokyo in 1942. Cinematographers photographed the city from the air and subsequently integrated the resulting footage into the film.
  • During filming, one of the Japanese planes crashed on the Hawaiian islet of Ford, located in the middle of Pearl Harbor. Fortunately, the pilot was unharmed, and footage of the crash made it into the final version of the film.
  • Two Japanese Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters were specially built for the film at a factory in Orenburg, Russia, specializing in the restoration of aircraft from World War II.
  • The takeoff of the Doolittle Raid participants was filmed aboard the USS Constellation off the coast of California, near San Diego. Computer graphics were used to transform the angled deck of the modern aircraft carrier into the straight deck of a World War II era carrier.
  • Two genuine Curtiss P-40 Warhawks, borrowed from the Warhawk Air Museum in Nampa, Idaho, were used during filming.
  • The scenes inside the hospital were actually filmed inside the Fort Shafter American military base in Honolulu.
  • Jon Voight wore accurate replicas of the steel braces that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was forced to wear. As a result, the actor suffered bruising and skin irritation where the braces were during filming and for several weeks afterward.
  • A fictional character by Thurmann, played by Dan Aykroyd, brings together a team of codebreakers who deciphered fragments of Japanese messages before the attack.
  • Colonel Dolittle's dog is actually Mason, a bullmastiff belonging to director Michael Bay.
  • Director Michael Bay left the project four times due to disagreements with the film studio.
  • Director Michael Bay and producer Jerry Bruckheimer agreed to reduce their fees by four million dollars to cut project costs. In response, many actors also agreed to corresponding salary reductions.
  • The film premiered in Pearl Harbor aboard the aircraft carrier “John C. Stennis.” Seating for viewers was set up on the flight deck, and the hangar was transformed into a 1940s-style nightclub for the party that followed the premiere. The screen was installed between the Arizona Memorial and the permanent mooring of the USS Missouri.
  • The total amount of funds spent on the film's production and advertising campaign is roughly equivalent to the amount of damage caused by the Japanese attack.
  • A total of 2,403 Americans were killed and 1,178 were wounded as a result of the attack on Pearl Harbor. Nearly half of the casualties (1,102 people) were caused by the explosion and subsequent sinking of the battleship 'Arizona'. The Japanese lost 64 personnel.
  • Contrary to popular belief, the damage from the attack on Pearl Harbor was not as catastrophic as often portrayed. None of the three large aircraft carriers were present at the time and therefore remained undamaged. Most of the American battleships damaged and sunk were already obsolete by that time and could not have provided a decisive advantage. Damaged ships were only temporarily withdrawn from the theater of operations, and some of the sunken ships were soon salvaged and repaired. Valuable parts, such as gun turrets, were removed from the majority of ships beyond repair. A more significant loss was the destruction of 155 out of 188 aircraft based in Hawaii. The psychological shock following the attack was far greater than the material damage.
  • Many American veterans who participated in the events depicted in the film rejected and criticized it as being too 'Hollywood' and far from reality, as well as containing numerous errors and inaccuracies. Among other things, the portrayal of Colonel James Doolittle as a boisterous, arrogant, and conceited man drew particular displeasure, in contrast to the warm, brave, sincere, and humble man he actually was. Virtually all veterans who knew him personally were deeply offended.
  • In the film, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt receives news of the Japanese attack and the damage incurred from an advisor entering the room. In reality, the President was having lunch with his old friend Harry Hopkins when a call came from Secretary of War Henry Stimson. Hopkins refused to believe the message, but the President did.
  • The roles of the two main characters in the fragment depicting the attack on Pearl Harbor correspond to two American pilots, Lieutenants George Welch and Kenneth M. Taylor, who took to the skies and together shot down between 6 and 10 Japanese fighters. At the same time, the film does not contain a single mention of Welch and Taylor, which many considered incorrect, if not simply offensive.
  • Six months after the film's release, the National Geographic channel released a documentary film, “Making of ‘Pearl Harbor’” (2001), almost entirely devoted to the errors and inaccuracies in the film.
  • One of the most famous American critics of our time, Roger Ebert, gave the film a highly negative review. Subsequently, director Michael Bay called Ebert's criticism the most painful insult he had received throughout his film career.
  • The film earned a place in the Guinness Book of Records as the film in which the most explosives were used.
  • Dorie Miller, played by Cuba Gooding Jr., was the first African American to serve in the US Navy.
  • The attack scenes were filmed at the same Mexican studios as James Cameron's legendary "Titanic".
  • The Stearman biplane shown in the opening scenes of the film was put into production in 1935 and therefore could not have existed in 1923, when the scenes are set according to the script.
  • Japanese aircraft of that period were painted light gray, not green, as shown in the film.
  • In one of the panoramic shots in the film, the memorial to the battleship "Arizona", built over its sunken hull, can be seen. The memorial was created in the 1960s. In another such panoramic shot of the American fleet before the "Doolittle Raid", a "Burke"-class destroyer is visible. The first of these warships entered service in 1991.
  • When Rafe and the team rushed to the hangars of the second airfield, the Japanese had not yet attacked, and two P-40 fighters were already burning.
  • Jack Daniel's whiskey in bottles like these did not exist in the 1940s (the awards this brand has yet to earn are visible).
  • General Marshall, who was speaking with Roosevelt, inexplicably wears the Vietnam Service Medal ribbon.
  • One of the roles in the film could have gone to Adrien Brody, but he preferred filming in "The Pianist".
  • Filming of the movie took place from April 10th to September 15th, 2000.
  • One of the roles in the film could have gone to Adrien Brody, but he preferred to film in "The Pianist".
  • Charlize Theron turned down the lead female role in the film, preferring the drama "Sweet November" (2001).
  • Unlike the earlier film "Tora! Tora! Tora!" (1970), also dedicated to the attack on Pearl Harbor, actual Japanese "Mitsubishi Zero" fighters were used. A total of three fighters were involved – one located in the "Planes of Fame Museum" in Chino, California, the second – in the "Museum of Flight" in Santa Monica, California, and the third belonging to the non-profit organization "Memorial Air Force", based in Texas. The film "Tora! Tora! Tora!" used accurate replicas constructed for the US Army during World War II. Thirty years later, some of them were used again during the filming of "Pearl Harbor".
  • Jack Daniel's whiskey in similar bottles did not exist in the 1940s (awards that the brand had not yet earned are visible).
  • General Marshall, who was talking to Roosevelt, inexplicably wore the Vietnam Service Medal ribbon on his chest.
Did you like the film?

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