SynonymsBot
Synonyms for shinichi_tsutsumi or Related words with shinichi_tsutsumi
takayuki_yamada
aoi_miyazaki
satoshi_tsumabuki
eri_fukatsu
maki_horikita
kōichi_satō
shun_oguri
nana_eikura
shota_matsuda
kiichi_nakai
kōji_yakusho
ryuhei_matsuda
mirai_moriyama
juri_ueno
erika_toda
toshiyuki_nishida
hiroshi_abe
tori_matsuzaka
etsushi_toyokawa
miho_kanno
takao_osawa
junichi_okada
haruka_ayase
yoshio_harada
kyōka_suzuki
toma_ikuta
naohito_fujiki
teruyuki_kagawa
hiromi_nagasaku
hiroki_narimiya
machiko_ono
haruma_miura
satomi_ishihara
yūko_takeuchi
masaki_okada
keiko_kitagawa
naoto_takenaka
akira_emoto
susumu_terajima
tsutomu_yamazaki
yukie_nakama
mirei_kiritani
kengo_kora
tatsuya_fujiwara
tetsuji_tamayama
hiroki_matsukata
yuriko_hoshi
chizuru_ikewaki
tetsuya_watari
shima_iwashita
Examples of "shinichi_tsutsumi"
The title song served as theme song for the drama "Yamato Nadeshiko", which starred Nanako Matsushima and
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
.
The novel was turned into a 2007 live action movie, directed by Masato Harada and starring
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
, Hiroshi Abe, Kippei Shiina, Hiroyuki Miyasako, and Rena Tanaka.
Kou Shibasaki,
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
, Kazue Fukiishi, Anna Nagata, Atsushi Ida, and Kana Ito additionally appear as Yumi Nakamura, Hiroshi Yamashita, Natsumi Konishi, Yoko Okazaki, Kenji Kawai, and Rina Tsuchiya, respectively, through archive footage from the first film.
Honnōji Hotel is a 2017 Japanese comedy mystery fantasy film directed by Masayuki Suzuki, written by Tomoko Aizawa and starring Haruka Ayase,
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
, Gaku Hamada, Hiroyuki Hirayama, , Masahiro Takashima, Masaomi Kondō and Morio Kazama. It was released in Japan by Toho on 14 January 2017.
Takagi (
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
), a seemingly average Japanese businessman, wakes up in a hotel room but doesn't know how he wound up there. When a packet of "purification salt" falls out of his pocket, he starts having memories of a funeral and a meeting with a yakuza boss. Soon he finds out he is in deep trouble.
The mission, as revealed by the grim Chief of Staff Asakura (
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
) following the Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, is to intercept U.S. ships transporting a third nuclear weapon to Tinian Island, the principal base from which American B-29s are striking the Japanese home Islands. The man charged with the mission is Commander Masami (Yakusho Koji) - a brilliant destroyer of enemy ships relieved of his command when he opposed the Navy's increasing reliance on suicide tactics. Given a last chance to redeem himself, he is burning with zeal, but is ignorant of the various secrets the "I-507" carries on board.
Yasuko Hanaoka (Yasuko Matsuyuki) is a divorced, single mother who owns a restaurant. Tetsuya Ishigami (
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
) is a reclusive, but brilliant mathematics teacher, who lives next door of Yasuko and Misato (Yasuko's daughter). Ishigami is solemn and introverted, and his morning exchanges with Yasuko from whose restaurant he buys lunch, is the brightest part of his day. When Togashi (Yasuko's abusive ex-husband) shows up one night to extort money from Yasuko, threatening both her and her teenaged daughter Misato, the situation quickly escalates into violence and Togashi is killed by mother and daughter on the apartment floor. Overhearing the commotion from his room and deducing that Togashi has been killed, Ishigami offers his help to the mother and daughter. He not only disposes the body, but also plots the cover-up step-by-step.
The 1964 NHK Taiga drama "Akō Rōshi" was followed by no fewer than 21 television productions of "Chūshingura." Toshirō Mifune starred in the 1971 "Daichūshingura" on NET, and Kinnosuke Yorozuya crossed over from film to play the same role in 1979, also on NET. "Tōge no Gunzō", the third NHK Taiga drama on the subject, starred Ken Ogata, and renowned director Juzo Itami appeared as Kira. In 2001 Fuji TV made a four-hour special of the story starring Takuya Kimura as Horibe Yasubei (one of the Akō ronin) and Kōichi Satō as Ōishi Kuranosuke, called "Chūshingura 1/47" . Kōtarō Satomi, Matsumoto Kōshirō IX, Beat Takeshi, Tatsuya Nakadai, Hiroki Matsukata, Kinya Kitaōji, Akira Emoto, Akira Nakao, Nakamura Kanzaburō XVIII, Ken Matsudaira, and
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
are among the many stars to play Ōishi. Hisaya Morishige, Naoto Takenaka, and others have portrayed Kira. Izumi Inamori starred as Aguri (Yōzeiin), the central character in the ten-hour 2007 special "Chūshingura Yōzeiin no Inbō."
Kimihiko Onizuka (Sadao Abe) is a salaryman infatuated with maiko (apprentice geisha) and whose greatest goal in life is to play a party game called yakyuken with one. Upon being transferred to his company's Kyoto branch, he dumps his coworker girlfriend Fujiko (Kou Shibasaki) and makes his first ever visit to a geisha house. However, when the realization of Kimihiko's lifelong dream is rudely interrupted by a professional baseball star named Kiichiro Naito (
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
), he vows revenge by becoming a pro baseball player himself. Meanwhile, Fujiko decides to become an apprentice geisha. A rivalry between Kimihiko and Naito ensues where they try to out-do each other at baseball, K-1, cooking, acting and even politics.
Beside being a V6 member, Okada is an accomplished actor with eleven movies, in eight of which he plays the lead, and sixteen dramas, in four of which he plays the lead. In a Shōnen Club Premium interview on May 7, 2009, he revealed that it was the Japanese drama "Kisarazu Cat's Eye" that caught the attention of viewers and directors, and made them aware of his acting ability. The success of the drama led to the making of two movie sequels, "Kisarazu Cat's Eye: Nihon Series" and "Kisarazu Cat's Eye: World Series". His other notable dramas include "Tiger & Dragon", a comedy drama about "rakugo", a form of Japanese comedy acted only by one person telling that story. and "SP" (also known as "Security Police"), an action suspense drama about a team of security police bodyguards in charge of protecting important people in the government. With
Shinichi
Tsutsumi
as his co-star, the drama drew in overall ratings of 15.35% despite its Saturday 11:00 p.m. (JST) time slot; its special episode broadcast in 2008 also received a viewership rating of 21.5%.