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{{Sidebar starship class|
[[Image:Japanese zero.jpg|thumb|Close-up of a '''Japanese Zero''']]
 
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|name = Japanese Zero
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|image = Japanese zero.jpg
 
|caption = Close-up of a '''Japanese Zero'''
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|owner = [[Japan]]
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|operator = [[Japanese Navy]]
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|type = [[Fighter]]
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|active = [[1940s]]
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}}
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The '''Japanese Zero''' was a type of [[aircraft]] used by [[Japan]] during the [[Second World War]].
 
The '''Japanese Zero''' was a type of [[aircraft]] used by [[Japan]] during the [[Second World War]].
   
The [[airplane]] featured in the [[movie]] ''[[From Here to Eternity]]'' where [[Burt Lancaster]]'s character shot several of them down. ({{DS9|Far Beyond the Stars}})
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The [[airplane]] was featured in the [[movie]] ''[[From Here to Eternity]]'', wherein [[Burt Lancaster]]'s character shot several of them down. ({{DS9|Far Beyond the Stars}})
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A Japanese Zero appeared while {{Captain}} [[James T. Kirk|Kirk]] and a [[landing party]] from the {{USS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}} were encountering several artificial constructs that were made to look like people, [[animal]]s, and objects that they were first thinking or talking about while on [[Shore Leave Planet|a lush planet]] during [[shore leave]]. The encounter with the plane included landing party members, [[Angela Martine]] and [[Lieutenant]] [[Esteban Rodriguez]], being [[strafing|strafed]] by the Japanese Zero and, in their running from it, ended up with Martine striking her head against a [[tree]], knocking her unconscious. Later, the Japanese Zero strafed the rest of the landing party as well. ({{TOS|Shore Leave}})
   
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{{bginfo|The footage used in ''The Original Series'' for a Zero was actually of an American F6F Hellcat, painted to look like a Zero. It was armed with what appeared to be Browning M2 machine guns. [http://www.imfdb.org/wiki/Star_Trek:_The_Original_Series] Ironically, the F6F Hellcat was the Zero's primary adversary during the latter half of WWII.|In the final draft script of "Shore Leave", this specific type of airplane wasn't identified, with the script's stage directions merely stipulating that the aircraft was to be a "vintage" airplane, depicted using stock footage.}}
[[Captain Kirk]] and his crew experienced several hallucinations while on a lust, mysterious planet during [[shore leave]], which included being strafed by a Japanese Zero ({{TOS|Shore Leave}})
 
   
==Background==
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== External link ==
 
* {{Wikipedia}}
The footage used in ''The Original Series'' for a Zero was actually an American F6F Hellcat painted to look like a Zero.
 
   
==External Links==
 
*{{Wikipedia}}
 
   
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[[fr:Chasseur Zero]]
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[[ja:零式艦上戦闘機]]
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[[nl:Japanse Zero]]
 
[[Category:Earth vehicles]]
 
[[Category:Earth vehicles]]
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[[Category:Military]]

Revision as of 20:18, 6 December 2019

The Japanese Zero was a type of aircraft used by Japan during the Second World War.

The airplane was featured in the movie From Here to Eternity, wherein Burt Lancaster's character shot several of them down. (DS9: "Far Beyond the Stars")

A Japanese Zero appeared while Captain Kirk and a landing party from the USS Enterprise were encountering several artificial constructs that were made to look like people, animals, and objects that they were first thinking or talking about while on a lush planet during shore leave. The encounter with the plane included landing party members, Angela Martine and Lieutenant Esteban Rodriguez, being strafed by the Japanese Zero and, in their running from it, ended up with Martine striking her head against a tree, knocking her unconscious. Later, the Japanese Zero strafed the rest of the landing party as well. (TOS: "Shore Leave")

The footage used in The Original Series for a Zero was actually of an American F6F Hellcat, painted to look like a Zero. It was armed with what appeared to be Browning M2 machine guns. [1] Ironically, the F6F Hellcat was the Zero's primary adversary during the latter half of WWII.
In the final draft script of "Shore Leave", this specific type of airplane wasn't identified, with the script's stage directions merely stipulating that the aircraft was to be a "vintage" airplane, depicted using stock footage.

External link