Synonyms for chizuru_ikewaki or Related words with chizuru_ikewaki

takayuki_yamada              shota_matsuda              fumiyo_kohinata              takao_osawa              yoshio_harada              jun_kunimura              kimiko_yo              tetsuji_tamayama              machiko_ono              osamu_mukai              aoi_miyazaki              ren_osugi              akira_emoto              tori_matsuzaka              ken_mitsuishi              gō_ayano              masayuki_mori              mirei_kiritani              masahiko_tsugawa              tatsuya_fuji              kyoka_suzuki              manami_konishi              yuriko_yoshitaka              masami_nagasawa              keiko_takeshita              shun_oguri              nana_eikura              maki_horikita              eiji_okada              miho_kanno              kaori_momoi              mirai_moriyama              yôko              shinichi_tsutsumi              eri_fukatsu              masaki_okada              hidetaka_yoshioka              hiroyuki_nagato              gaku_hamada              yoshiko_kuga              keiko_kitagawa              kyōko_kishida              ryohei_suzuki              kyōka_suzuki              ryunosuke_kamiki              tsutomu_yamazaki              kengo_kora              teruyuki_kagawa              kōichi_satō              masataka_kubota             



Examples of "chizuru_ikewaki"
"Kiyoku Yawaku" opened at seventh place in the Japanese box office, raking in takings of 86 million yen in its opening weekend. Despite its below-average box office performance, Chizuru Ikewaki won the "Best Actress" award for her role in "Kiyoku Yawaku" at the 6th Tama Film Awards in Japan.
Other films scored by Sakamoto include Pedro Almodóvar's "Tacones lejanos (High Heels)" (1991), Bertolucci's "The Little Buddha" (1993), Oliver Stone's "Wild Palms" (1993), John Maybury's "" (1998), Brian De Palma's "Snake Eyes" (1998) and "Femme Fatale" (2002), Oshima's "Gohatto" (1999), Jun Ichikawa's (director of the Mitsui ReHouse commercial from 1997 to 1999 starring Chizuru Ikewaki and Mao Inoue) "Tony Takitani" (2005).
Mao Inoue, the host of the Red Team, is a Japanese actress best known for her roles in "Hana Yori Dango" (Boys Over Flowers), and "Kids War" and co-starring with Chizuru Ikewaki in Mitsui ReHouse commercial from 1997 to 1999. Arashi, the hosts for the White Team, are a popular male J-Pop group who has not only sold millions, but appeared in dramas, hosted shows, and had countless endorsements.
It was adapted into a Japanese film directed by Tomoyuki Furumaya in 2008. The film was produced by Toho and premiered on October 25, 2008. Tomoyuki Furumaya and Noriko Goto wrote the screenplay for the film. The film cast Teppei Koike as Hiroshi Tamura, Akihiro Nishino as Kenichi Tamura, Chizuru Ikewaki as Sachiko Tamura and Yuko Kotegawa as Kyoko Tamura. The ending theme of the film is "Here" by The Grace. Yoshimoto R&C released the normal and special DVDs of the film on April 24, 2009.
In a Japanese port town, Tatsuo Sato (Go Ayano), a traumatized man, spends his days drifting aimlessly and his nights drinking himself to oblivion. Whiling his hours away at a pachinko parlor, he meets Takuji Ohshiro (Masaki Suda), a young man on parole who impulsively invites him to a shabby house on the outskirts of town. There, Tatsuo glimpses Takuji’s bedridden father and callous mother, and meets his world-weary older sister Chinatsu Ohshiro (Chizuru Ikewaki). While immediately drawn to each other, romance is an unaffordable luxury for the emotionally closed-off Tatsuo and the disillusioned Chinatsu, who sells herself to provide for her family and keep her brother out of jail. As Tatsuo and Chinatsu take tentative steps towards a relationship, the happy-go-lucky Takuji latches onto Tatsuo, binding their fates. Each step they take to build a better life sets off a chain of actions that have devastating consequences.
The musical score for "The Revenant" was composed by Japanese musician Ryuichi Sakamoto who had previously scored the Square Enix's Dawn of Mana, The Last Emperor (directed by Bernardo Bertolucci), Poppoya (directed by Yasuo Furuhata), Tony Takitani (directed by Jun Ichikawa the director of the Mitsui ReHouse commercial from 1997 to 1999 starring Chizuru Ikewaki and Mao Inoue), and German electronic musician Alva Noto with additional music composed by Bryce Dessner. The main body of the score was recorded at the Seattlemusic Scoring Stage in the Bastyr Chapel in greater Seattle, Washington by musicians of the Northwest Sinfonia. Sakamoto conducted these sessions. Bryce Dessner's portion of the score was performed by the 25-piece Berlin-based orchestra known as "s t a r g a z e" under conductor André de Ridder. Additional licensed music includes "Become Ocean", the Pulitzer Prize and Grammy Award-winning work of John Luther Adams as recorded by the Seattle Symphony with conductor Ludovic Morlot and an excerpt of "Jetsun Mila" from French musician and composer Eliane Radigue. A soundtrack album was released digitally on December 25, 2015, and on CD on January 8, 2016. Milan Records will release a vinyl pressing of the soundtrack in April 2016.