Synonyms for kinnosuke_nakamura or Related words with kinnosuke_nakamura

kiichi_nakai              ken_ogata              hiroki_matsukata              raizō_ichikawa              kyōka_suzuki              tori_matsuzaka              rentarō_mikuni              hana_moyu              kōji_yakusho              yoshio_harada              michiyo_aratama              kōichi_satō              tetsuya_watari              teruyuki_kagawa              takayuki_yamada              shinichi_tsutsumi              takahiro_tamura              keiju_kobayashi              yui_natsukawa              yuriko_hoshi              tsutomu_yamazaki              toshiyuki_nishida              ayako_wakao              ryuhei_matsuda              shigeru_amachi              takao_osawa              tatsuya_fujiwara              kengo_kora              junichi_okada              mirai_moriyama              yuzo_kayama              hidetaka_yoshioka              kinya_kitaoji              akira_emoto              shima_iwashita              tokihiko              shintarō_katsu              toshirō              torajiro              masao_kusakari              ryōtarō              tatsuya_nakadai              yoshiko_mita              susumu_fujita              kinnosuke              naoto_takenaka              kazuo_hasegawa              shozo_makino              ittoku_kishibe              gaku_hamada             



Examples of "kinnosuke_nakamura"
In film, Mikimoto appeared in "Gion Matsuri" (1968) with Kinnosuke Nakamura and Toshiro Mifune; "The Fall of Ako Castle" (1978), directed by Kinji Fukasaku and starring Nakamura, Mifune, and Sonny Chiba; and films set in modern times such as "Zero Fighter Burns" and the 1986 "The Return of Godzilla" with Raymond Burr and Japan Academy Prize-winning actress Yasuko Sawaguchi.
Many actors appeared as guest stars in only a few episodes. Among them were many known to audiences outside Japan. These included superstar Kinnosuke Nakamura as Wakisaka Awaji-no-kami, Matsumoto Kōshirō, Shintaro Katsu (of Zatoichi fame), Takashi Shimura, Eiji Okada, Yukiyo Toake, Masakazu Tamura, shigeru Tsuyuguchi, Kinichi Hagimoto, Terumi Niki, Masaaki Sakai, and Shinji Maki.
Tange Samanosuke, a Sōma clan samurai, is attacked and mutilated as a result of betrayal, losing his right eye and right arm, and becomes a nihilistic ronin, using the pseudonym "Sazen". He's been played in numerous films by , Tsumasaburō Bandō, Ryūtarō Ōtomo, Ryūnosuke Tsukigata, Kinnosuke Nakamura, and Tetsurō Tanba.
The dozen works with Tasuke's name in the title include the 1930 Chiezō Kataoka portrayal in the Nikkatsu film "Isshin Tasuke," directed by Hiroshi Inagaki. Akira Kurosawa wrote the screenplay for the 1945 "Appare Isshin Taskue" starring Kenichi Enomoto (directed by Kiyoshi Saeki for Toho). Kabuki actor Kinnosuke Nakamura (Yorozuya) starred in five of a series of six movies for Toei (Katsuo Nakamura portrayed the hero in the other).
, incorporated 1938, had erected its facilities immediately east of the Tōkyū Tōyoko Line; they managed the Tōkyū Shibuya Yokohama studio system prior to V-J Day. From 1945 through the Toei merger, Tokyo-Yokohama Films leased from the Daiei Motion Picture Company a second studio in Kyoto. Through the merger, they gained the combined talents and experience of actors Chiezō Kataoka, Utaemon Ichikawa, Ryunosuke Tsukigata, Ryūtarō Ōtomo, Kinnosuke Nakamura, Chiyonosuke Azuma, Shirunosuke Toshin, Hashizo Okawa, and Satomi Oka.
Tange Sazen first appeared in a serial by which ran from October 1927 to May 1928 in the "Mainichi Shimbun". The story concerned the exploits of Ōoka Echizen, and Tange Sazen was a minor character. But his strikingly dramatic appearance, with a scar across his right eye and an empty right sleeve, as embodied in illustrations by , so caught the imagination of the public that within a few months three films of Tange's adventures were produced by different companies. The most popular of these movies was that directed by Daisuke Itō at Nikkatsu, starring . As a result of the success of these films, Hayashi wrote a new serial, "Tange Sazen", with Tange as the hero. This initially ran in the "Mainichi Shimbun" from June to October 1933, but internal strife at the newspaper led to the interruption of publication and the serial eventually resumed in the "Yomiuri Shimbun" from January 1934. In this story, Tange developed from the nihilistic character he had been in the first novel to a doughty fighter against injustice. The film "The Million Ryo Pot" featured Ōkōchi playing a comic Tange. Ōkōchi is the actor most identified with Tange in the cinema, but many others have played the role, including Tsumasaburō Bandō, Ryūtarō Ōtomo, Ryūnosuke Tsukigata, Kinnosuke Nakamura, and Tetsurō Tanba. Komako Hara also played a female Sazen in a couple of films in 1937.