SynonymsBot
Synonyms for kirin_kiki or Related words with kirin_kiki
yoshio_harada
kiichi_nakai
naoto_takenaka
kōichi_satō
shota_matsuda
susumu_terajima
teruyuki_kagawa
kimiko_yo
masami_nagasawa
mitsuko_baisho
mariko_okada
takao_osawa
hidetaka_yoshioka
jun_kunimura
kaori_momoi
aoi_miyazaki
kōji_yakusho
shima_iwashita
satoshi_tsumabuki
mirei_kiritani
yoshino_kimura
keiko_kishi
akira_emoto
renji_ishibashi
keiko_matsuzaka
maki_horikita
takayuki_yamada
miki_nakatani
gō_ayano
tsutomu_yamazaki
yū_aoi
kazuki_kitamura
toshiyuki_nishida
ren_osugi
keiko_awaji
kengo_kora
masaki_okada
ayako_wakao
ken_mitsuishi
yasuko_matsuyuki
kippei_shiina
haruka_ayase
naohito_fujiki
rentarō_mikuni
yuriko_hoshi
kyōka_suzuki
erika_toda
shinobu_otake
ryuhei_matsuda
eri_fukatsu
Examples of "kirin_kiki"
Kishimoto gained popularity for her commercials, including a Manzai double act with
Kirin
Kiki
in the 1980s, Fujifilm, Orient Finance and her performance alongside Sonny Chiba in Toyota Carina commercials.
Rowe’s feature films include "Treasure Island", starring Jack Palance and Kevin Zegers, "Lost!" starring Ken Welsh, Michael Hogan and Helen Shaver, and "The Best Bad Thing" starring Lana McKissick and
Kirin
Kiki
.
That night, Miyamoto sees Milly cleaning up his trenchcoat on a coat hanger, so he tells her to go back to sleep. The next morning he discovers photos of himself and a newspaper article on his death. He shows these to his weapons supplier Shi (
Kirin
Kiki
), who tells him it's an elaborate trick the Triads wouldn't waste their time on.
He married essayist and musician Yayako Uchida, the daughter of actress
Kirin
Kiki
and rock'n roll singer Yuya Uchida, in 1995. He adopted his wife's surname as a mukoyōshi, thus his legal name on the official registry is now Masahiro Uchida. They currently have three children.
Besides them, the film’s cast includes Tomokazu Miura, Shinobu Otake, Keiko Takeshita, and
Kirin
Kiki
. The four actors have previous voice acting experience, but none of them have been in a Studio Ghibli film before. Miura and Otake were respectively cast as Arrietty's parents Pod and Homily. In addition, Takeshita voiced Sho's aunt and Kiki voiced one of the helpers in the human family.
Yuya Uchida married actress
Kirin
Kiki
in 1973. The two separated two years later but remain married. Their daughter Yayako Uchida is an essayist/singer and married to actor Masahiro Motoki, who was adopted into the Uchida family as a "mukoyōshi". Yuya is the grandfather to three children by his daughter.
In November 13, 2010, Paramount and Shochiku released a Japanese remake of "Ghost", titled . The remake stars Nanako Matsushima, South Korean actor Song Seung-heon, and veteran actress
Kirin
Kiki
. In this film, the ghost is a woman, played by Matsushima.
Arrietty, titled in Japan and The Secret World of Arrietty in North America, is a 2010 Japanese animated fantasy film made in Studio Ghibli, directed by Hiromasa Yonebayashi and scripted by Hayao Miyazaki and Keiko Niwa. It is based on "The Borrowers" by Mary Norton, an English author of children's books, about a family of tiny people who live secretly in the walls and floors of a typical household, borrowing items from humans to survive. The film stars the voices of Mirai Shida, Ryunosuke Kamiki, Shinobu Otake, Keiko Takeshita, Tatsuya Fujiwara, Tomokazu Miura, and
Kirin
Kiki
, and tells the story of a young Borrower (Shida) befriending a human boy (Kamiki), while trying to avoid being detected by the other humans. Toshio Suzuki produced the film.
Kiki was born in the Kanda area of Tokyo as the daughter of a master of the "biwa" lute. After graduating from high school, she started her acting career in the early 1960s as a member of the Bungakuza theater troupe using the stage name Chiho Yūki (悠木千帆). She eventually gained fame for performing uniquely comedic and eccentric roles on such television shows as "Jikan desu yo" and "Terauchi Kantarō ikka" and in television commercials. She changed her name to "
Kirin
Kiki
" when, after being asked on a television show to auction off something of hers, she ended up selling her first stage name, claiming she had "nothing else to sell."
Miyazaki later co-wrote the screenplay for Studio Ghibli's next film, "The Secret World of Arrietty", based on Mary Norton's 1952 novel "The Borrowers". The film was the directorial debut of Hiromasa Yonebayashi, a Ghibli animator. Starring the voices of Mirai Shida, Ryunosuke Kamiki, Tomokazu Miura, Keiko Takeshita, Shinobu Otake and
Kirin
Kiki
, the film focuses on a small family known as the Borrowers who must avoid detection when discovered by humans. The film was released on July 17, 2010, again to positive reviews, and grossed $145 million worldwide. In 2011, Miyazaki co-wrote "From Up on Poppy Hill", based on the 1980 manga of the same name written by Tetsurō Sayama and illustrated by Chizuru Takahashi. The film stars the voices of Masami Nagasawa, Junichi Okada, Shunsuke Kazama and Teruyuki Kagawa. Set in Yokohama, the film's story focuses on Umi Matsuzaki, a high school student who is forced to fend for herself when her sailor father goes missing from the seaside town. The film was released on July 16, 2011, once again to positive reviews.
Dwelling on his past glory as a prize-winning author, Ryota (Hiroshi Abe) wastes the money he makes as a private detective on gambling and can barely meet ends and pay child support. After the death of his father, his aging mother Yoshiko (
Kirin
Kiki
) seem to be moving on with her life with hobbies with the local elderly ladies. Ryota makes extra money by counter-offering his service with agency's client targets. He gets a contract to aid in a manga series with an upcoming artist but his ambitions stymie him from it initially. He finds his sister Chinatsu is visiting their mother frequently and suspects she is trying sponge off her and as he believes she makes their mother to pay for her daughter's figure skating lesson's from her social pension. His sister suspects Ryota's visits are for taking advantage of their mother. Ryota tries to renew contact with his beautiful ex-wife Kyoko (Yoko Make) and in a stormy summer night sheltered at his mother's home with his family he attempts to take back control of his existence and to find a lasting place in the life of his young son Shingo (Taiyo Yoshizawa). His ex-wife says it is truly over with them and grownups cannot live only with love but planning is required and Ryota isn't cut out to be family man, if he were he would have done so earlier. Ryota reaches an understanding on his family life and uses the chance to bond with his son and tries to make memorable experiences he had with his father as a child with his son before time and place for it passes over.