Synonyms for susumu_terajima or Related words with susumu_terajima

fumiyo_kohinata              ren_osugi              teruyuki_kagawa              yutaka_matsushige              kōichi_satō              shota_matsuda              naoto_takenaka              renji_ishibashi              jun_kunimura              ken_mitsuishi              akira_emoto              yoshio_harada              mariko_okada              kazuki_kitamura              hidetaka_yoshioka              takao_osawa              ittoku_kishibe              yuriko_hoshi              yoshino_kimura              kirin_kiki              tsutomu_yamazaki              tetsuji_tamayama              kiichi_nakai              tomorowo_taguchi              takashi_tsukamoto              takayuki_yamada              hiroki_matsukata              kimiko_yo              iseya              takumi_saito              eijirō_tōno              daisuke_katō              kunie_tanaka              tetsurō_tamba              kyōko_kagawa              takaya_kamikawa              eitaro_ozawa              keiko_awaji              shinichi_tsutsumi              kengo_kora              eitarō              nakamaru              jun_kaname              katsuo_nakamura              yui_natsukawa              yoshiko_kuga              toshiyuki_nishida              eri_fukatsu              gō_ayano              kyōka_suzuki             



Examples of "susumu_terajima"
Aka Suave. Iseya co-starred with Arata Iura, Yui Natsukawa, and Susumu Terajima in Hirokazu Koreeda's "Distance". He appeared in Takashi Miike's "13 Assassins".
Others include : Akira Emoto, Itsuji Itao, Ayumi Ito, Ryo Katsuji, Kyōko Koizumi, Hitomi Kurihara, Miyuki Matsuda, Ken Mitsuishi, Aoi Miyazaki, Noriko Sengoku, Tomorowo Taguchi, Rena Takeshita, Tetsushi Tanaka, Susumu Terajima, ...
'Beat' Takeshi is a showbiz star. He lives through business in film studio and TV stations where main casts appear in one of their dual roles (Takeshi's Girlfriend (Kotomi Kyono), Takeshi's Manager (Ren Osugi), and Takeshi's former partner of stand-up comedy (Susumu Terajima)).
Jijii feeds Kakihara rumors suggesting that Suzuki (Susumu Terajima), a member of the rival Funaki clan, has kidnapped Anjo. Kakihara captures Suzuki and tortures him with suspension and piercing, but when Suzuki turns out to be innocent, Kakihara slices off the end of his own tongue and offers it to Suzuki's boss (Jun Kunimura) as penance.
Kumakiri debuted with "Kichiku" in 1997. His 2001 film, "Hole in the Sky", starred Susumu Terajima and Yuriko Kikuchi. His 2004 film, "Green Mind, Metal Bats", screened at the International Film Festival Rotterdam in 2006. He directed "Sketches of Kaitan City" in 2010. In 2012, he returned with "Blazing Famiglia", which starred the comedian Yoshimi Tokui.His 2014 film, "My Man", won the “Golden George” prize for the best film at the 36th Moscow International Film Festival.
As a child, Ishikawa Goemon's (Yōsuke Eguchi) entire family was assassinated for political reasons. His mother (Ryo) sent Goemon away for safety minutes before he witnessed her death. Running away with his caretaker, they were attacked by bandits but he was saved by the great Nobunaga Oda (Hashinosuké Nakamura). Goemon followed Nobunaga and Hattori Hanzō (Susumu Terajima) was assigned to train him in the ways of the shinobi (ninja) along with his martial brother, Saizō (Takao Osawa).
, born , is a Japanese actor. For his work in "Cure", "Hana-bi" and other films, Osugi was given the Best Supporting Actor award at the 1999 Yokohama Film Festival. He often works alongside Takeshi Kitano and Susumu Terajima. In the DVDcommentary to the mpd.psycho (TV Miniseries) series, director Takashi Miike said that he admired Osugi's experience to shift quickly from comic and imbecilic to authoritative and earnest.
Kitano then happens to pick up a gun at a yakuza quarrel. He shoots first his yakuza neighbor (Susumu Terajima), and begins to kill people around his world. The film implies it is some kind of a dream, showing deceased guys appear again in blood and yell alive normally. Kitano takes out his female neighbor (Kotomi Kyono) and commits a bank robbery. Accomplishing his fantasies of acting like a movie star 'Beat' Takeshi, Kitano takes a journey into the absolutely bizarre, surreal world (an underground nightclub, night gun battles, and the catastrophe at a "Boiling Point"-, or "Sonatine"-like tropical island).
Takeshi Kitano plays Yamamoto, a brutal and experienced Yakuza enforcer, whose boss was killed and whose clan was defeated in a criminal war with a rival family. Surviving clan members have a few options: either to join winners, reconciling with shame and distrust, or to die by committing seppuku. Yamamoto, however, decides to escape to Los Angeles along with his associate Kato (Susumu Terajima). There he finds his estranged half-brother Ken (Claude Maki), who runs a small-time drug business together with his local African-American friends. At the first meeting, Yamamoto badly hurts one of them, Denny (Omar Epps), for an attempt to fraud him. Later, Denny becomes one of the Yamamoto's closest friends and associates.
Born in Wakayama Prefecture, Sabu studied at an Osaka fashion school before deciding to go to Tokyo to become a professional musician. It was suggested he try acting and in 1986 he made his film debut in "Sorobanzuku". He earned his first starring role in the 1991 "World Apartment Horror", a live-action film directed by Katsuhiro Ōtomo of "Akira" fame. Working from a script he wrote himself, he made his directorial debut with the 1996 "Dangan Runner", a film that set his early style of "quirky action-comedies propelled by characters who hurtle headlong though squirming narratives steered more by the forces of incidence and coincidence than the actions of the protagonists themselves." Shin'ichi Tsutsumi played the lead in Sabu's first five films. "Blessing Bell", starring Susumu Terajima (who has played minor roles in nearly all of Sabu's films), was a turn away from his kinetic, parodic, and black comedy narratives, and earned the NETPAC Award at the 2003 Berlin Film Festival. Later films featured the J-pop band V6. In 2009, he directed "The Crab Cannery Ship", a modern adaptation of a classic of Japanese proletarian literature written by Takiji Kobayashi.
In the year 2014, Japan suffers a major economic collapse and people are forced to emigrate to mainland China. The movie introduced the story with two vampires, Kei and Luka, of whom the first was probably made a vampire by the former, and in later Kei's flashback is revealed that Luka decided to end his existence by watching the sunrise. Three orphaned boys live in a fictional Chinese city called Mallepa, a 'melting pot' of different Asian groups. They are named Shō (Gackt), Shinji (Susumu Terajima) who is Sho's brother, and Toshi (Tarô Yamamoto). All three survive through pickpocketing. During a theft gone wrong, Sho meets Kei (Hyde) - a vampire who appears to be a young man - sitting amidst a pile of debris and brings him back to the orphan's hideout. When the orphans are attacked by a man they previously robbed Kei attacks, kills, and feeds off of their attacker thereby revealing his status as a vampire to the orphans. However, Sho approaches him, unafraid.
Set in the Muromachi period in early 16th-century Japan, the young ninja Rantaro (Seishiro Kato) is born into a family of low-ranking ninjas. Rantaro is sent by his father and mother (Shido Nakamura and Rei Dan) to attend the six-year course at a Ninja Academy run by Denzo Yamada (Susumu Terajima). Rantaro's homeroom teacher is Hansuke Doi (Takahiro Miura) and head of the Ninja Girl classes at the school is Shina Yamamoto who appears as either a beautiful young woman (Anne Watanabe) or an older woman (Tamao Nakamura). After going home to his parents' farm for the holidays, Rantaro is joined by his schoolmate Shinbei (Futa Kimura) but they later decided to stay with teacher Doi. One day, some Usetake ninjas arrive at the house of flamboyant hairdresser Yukitaka Saito (Takeshi Kaga) and his son Takamaru (Takuya Mizoguchi) in order to kill both of them. Yukitaka and Takamura used to belong to the Usetake clan, but Rantaro and his friends aim to save them by joining a contest that ends with a race to ring a bell on top of a mountain.