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In 1942, eighty American airmen launch a daring strike against Japan, a mission that sends them into capture, execution, and quiet heroism — bound for life by a sacred ritual that only the last survivor can complete.
SYNOPSIS:
On April 18, 1942, eighty American airmen launch sixteen B-25 bombers from the deck of the USS Hornet, executing the first U.S. air strike against the Japanese mainland. Though the physical damage is minimal, the psychological impact reverberates across the Pacific, altering the course of the war.
For the Raiders, the cost is immediate and devastating. Forced to bail out over China, many are rescued with the help of civilians who later suffer brutal Japanese reprisals. Eight airmen are captured. Three are executed after a secret military trial. One dies slowly in captivity. The remaining prisoners endure starvation, isolation, and moral pressure to denounce their mission — surviving not through heroics, but through quiet endurance.
Meanwhile, Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle, believing the mission a failure and expecting court-martial, instead returns home to a Medal of Honor and national acclaim — a stark contrast to the unseen suffering of the captured men.
After the war, the Raiders create a sacred ritual: eighty silver goblets engraved with their names. Each year, they gather to toast their fallen brothers, turning over the goblet of any Raider who has passed. As decades slip by, the reunions grow smaller. The cheers grow quieter.
In 2019, the final surviving Raider prepares to complete the ritual alone — pouring a final measure of 1896 cognac and turning over the last upright goblet. In that silent moment, memory, sacrifice, and legacy converge.
The Last Toast is not merely the story of a daring mission — it is a meditation on duty, survival, and the quiet burden carried by men who changed history, yet rarely spoke of it.
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