Junji Sakamoto

01.10.1954, Sakai, Osaka, Japan

 

Director
Sakamoto is a Japanese director and screenwriter. As a student he assisted directors such as Sogo Ishii and Kazuyuki Izutsu. He made his debut as a director with the film Knockout (Dotsuitarunen, 1989), for which he won the award as Best Young Director at the Film festival in Yokohama. His other films include Checkmate (Ôte, 1991), action drama Tokarefu (1994) for which he again won the award as Best Director at the Film festival in Yokohama, comedy Biriken (1996), An Angel with Many Scars (Kizu darake no tenshi, 1997), The Goofball (Orokamono: Kizu darake no tenshi, 1998), Face (Kao, 2000) for which he won the award for Best Director from the Japanese Academy as well as Best Director and Best Screenplay in Yokohama. He also made the drama Another Battle (Shin jingi naki tatakai, 2000), KT (2002) based on true events; the comedy My House, (Bokunchi, 2003), drama Out of This World (Kono yo no sotoe - Club Shinchugun, 2004), war drama Bôkoku no îgisu (2005), family drama Tamamoe! (2007), Chameleon (2008) and Yami no kodomotachi (2008). In 2010, he made Zatôichi, story about a blind samurai, Japanese writer Kan Shimosawa’s famous character. His last two films are Strangers in the City (Yukizuri no machi, 2010) and Someday (Ooshikamura soudouki, 2011).

Filmography


Films by this director

Knockout

(Dotsuitaru nen, 1989)

Directed by: Junji Sakamoto
PHOTOGRAPHY: Norimichi Kasamatsu
Synopsis:

This is the acclaimed debut by a leading Japanese independent film director and one of the first Japanese films about aggressive misfits. Boxer Eiji Adachi (Hidekazu Akai) loses his title in a fight against Eagle Tomoda (Masaharu Owada). He gets hurt badly and retires. He opens his own boxing school and hires the former champion as a trainer. However, many of the boxers do not accept Adachi’s violent methods. Adachi decides to return to the ring at any cost…

color, 110 minuta

Biriken

(Billiken, 1996)

Directed by: Junji Sakamoto
PHOTOGRAPHY: Norimichi Kasamatsu
Synopsis:

The main character in this film is the ghost of a formerly very popular kind of wooden statue called a Billiken. It is a god with a pointy head, fat stomach and distinctive smile. When its case gets broken, the ghost is set free and tries to make all the wishes of those who prayed to it come true. However, since he goes about it in a particular way, he does not always succeed.

35 mm, color, 100 min

My House

(Bokunchi, 2002)

Directed by: Junji Sakamoto
PHOTOGRAPHY: Norimichi Kasamatsu
Synopsis:

Seven-year-old Nita and his older brother Ita live in an eccentric fishing village. His father abandoned them a long time ago and their mother has been absent from the island for the last six months. The boys manage on their own roaming the village and spending time with its diverse inhabitants. When their mother returns together with a half-sister their daily routine changes.

35mm, color, 115min

Scarred Angels

(Kizu darake no tenshi, 1997.)

Directed by: Junji Sakamoto
PHOTOGRAPHY: Norimichi Kasamatsu
Synopsis:

Mitsuru Kida has a small detective agency near Tokyo and his friend Hisashi sometimes helps him. After the two of them get in a fight, Mitsuru decides to leave town. At that moment, he gets an assignment that leads him into an abandoned building where he finds a gangster on his deathbed. Feeling sorry for the dying man, he promises to take the man’s son to his ex-wife.

color, 35mm, 118 min

Awaiking

(Tamamoe!, 2006.)

Directed by: Junji Sakamoto
PHOTOGRAPHY: Ryo Otsuka
Synopsis:

Three years after retiring, Toshiko’s husband dies of a heart attack. During preparations for the funeral, the family gathers: daughter Miho and son Akiyuki with his wife whom Toshiko has not yet met as they live in California. By coincidence, Toshiko realizes that her husband had an affair with an older woman who he visited every Thursday when he was supposed to attend a cooking class.

color, 35mm, 125 min

Out of This World

(Kono yo no sotoe – Club Shinchugun, 2004.)

Directed by: Junji Sakamoto
PHOTOGRAPHY: Norimichi Kasamatsu
Synopsis:

During WW II, jazz was banned in Japan as the music of the enemy, but after the war, during the American occupation, it became very popular and flourished. A Japanese band The Lucky Strikers plays in an American military music club. Each of the band members has his own musical and life story. The club’s owner recently lost his son Danny, thus it is forbidden to play the song Danny Boy…

35 mm, color, 123 min
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