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  1. Akira Kurosawa (黒澤 明 Kurosawa Akira?, Shinagawa, Tokio, 23 de marzo de 1910- Setagaya, Tokio, 6 de septiembre de 1998) fue uno de los más célebres directores de cine de Japón. 1 Sugata sanshirô ( La leyenda del gran Judo) (1943) 2 fue su ópera prima y su filmografía consta de 30 películas, rodadas a lo largo de cinco décadas, 3 que incluye...

    • Ran (película)

      Ran (japonés: 乱, cuyo significado es "caos" o "miseria") [3]...

  2. Akira Kurosawa (黒澤明 or 黒沢明, Kurosawa Akira, March 23, 1910 – September 6, 1998) was a Japanese filmmaker and painter who directed 30 films in a career spanning over five decades. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest and most influential filmmakers in the history of cinema.

    • 182 cm (6 ft 0 in)
    • Hisao (b. 1945–) and Kazuko (b. 1954–)
    • 1936–1993
    • September 6, 1998 (aged 88), Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan
    • Filmography
    • Theater Work
    • Television Work
    • Books

    As director

    All the following are Japanese productions unless otherwise specified. A documentary film about the Noh theater, Gendai no No (Modern Noh), which was begun by the director during a break in the shooting of Ran, but was abandoned after about fifty minutes were filmed, is being completed according to Kurosawa's script and notes.[needs update]

    As producer

    Note: Data for the remainder of this filmography is derived primarily from the complete filmography created by Kurosawa's biographer, Stuart Galbraith IV, supplemented by IMDb's Kurosawa page. For the following films that Kurosawa directed, he also received a production credit: 1. Stray Dog(associate producer) 2. Throne of Blood(co-producer) 3. The Lower Depths(producer) 4. The Hidden Fortress(co-producer) 5. The Bad Sleep Well(co-producer) 6. Yojimbo(associate producer) 7. Sanjuro(associate...

    As screenwriter

    Kurosawa wrote or co-wrote the screenplays for all the films he himself directed. However, to supplement his income, he also wrote scripts for other Japanese directors throughout the 1940s, and even through the 1950s and part of the 1960s, long after he had become world-famous. He also worked on the scripts for two Hollywood productions he was slated to direct, but which, for complex reasons, were completed by and credited to other directors (although he did shoot some scenes for Tora tora to...

    During the mid-to-late 1940s, for the first and apparently the only time in his career, Akira Kurosawa involved himself in a number of theater-related projects. 1. Shaberu (Talking) – In 1945, immediately after the war, Kurosawa wrote a one-act play entitled Talking, for, in his words, "Kawaguchi's troupe" (presumably meaning playwright Matsutarō K...

    A documentary about horses called Song of the Horse (or Uma no Uta), directed by Kurosawa, was broadcast in Japan, supposedly on August 31, 1970 (Kurosawa otherwise totally avoided working in television). Very little is known about the film, and its release date is even in question. For instance, though the film is often said to have aired in Augus...

    Prior to writing the screenplay to his film, Stray Dog (Nora Inu, 1949), Kurosawa created, in about six weeks, a novel based on the same story (presumably also called Stray Dog), which he never published. It was written in the style of one of his favorite writers, the French crime author Georges Simenon. Writing it was supposed to help him compose ...

  3. La película fue la primera sobre samuráis que dirigió Akira Kurosawa. Originalmente quería dirigir una película sobre un solo día en la vida de un samurái, pero descubrió una historia sobre samuráis que defendían a agricultores durante su investigación.

  4. Vivir (生きる: Ikiru) [1] es una película dramática japonesa de 1952 y dirigida por Akira Kurosawa y protagonizada por Takashi Shimura. La trama se centra en el cambio de actitud de un veterano y aburrido funcionario cuando se da cuenta de que ha estado desperdiciando el tiempo al enfrentarse al final de su vida. [ 2 ]

    • Akira Kurosawa, Shinobu Hashimoto, Hideo Oguni
    • Akira Kurosawa