Mikio Naruse
Because his style was similar to that of Yasujiro Ozu, who was already active at Shochiku, he moved to PCL (currently Toho) in 1933, where he appeared in the talkie works "My Wife, Like a Rose" and "Tsuruhachi Tsurujiro." It got attention. There were times when he was unable to make as many films as he wanted due to wartime film regulations and post-war Toho disputes, but in 1951 he revived his career with Meshi. Since then, he has released masterpieces one after another, including "Okaasan," "Lightning," "The Couple," "Wife," "Anii Mouto," "Sounds of the Mountain," and "Bangiku." The pinnacle of his work, "Floating Clouds," is Kenji Mizoguchi's "Wife." Even director Ozu was impressed, calling it a masterpiece of Japanese cinema, on par with "The Sisters of Gion." He depicted ordinary people in everyday life with an everyday realism that was not influenced by lyricism, and he consistently sought out women as his subjects.
Never-Ending Man: Hayao Miyazaki
2017
Night Will Fall
2014
Seduced and Abandoned
2013
The Class of ‘92
2013
As I Was Moving Ahead, Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty
2000
Room 666
1982
Hitchcock/Truffaut
2015
Harry Dean Stanton: Partly Fiction
2013
In Search of the Last Action Heroes
2019
Marvel Studios: Assembling a Universe
2014
Joker: Put on a Happy Face
2020
Avatar: Creating the World of Pandora
2010
Burma VJ: Reporting from a Closed Country
2008
Obi-Wan Kenobi: A Jedi's Return
2022
I Am Heath Ledger
2017