Takeshi Kitano is one of the most famous contemporary Japanese directors. He is also a screenwriter, editor, actor, writer and painter. He began his career in the1980s, as a stand up comedian in the duo Two Beats (his artistic name was 
Beat Takeshi, which he later used as an actor). He began working as an actor (
Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence, 1983.), and made his directing debut in 1989 with the film 
Violent Cop (Sono otoko, kyôbô ni tsuki). Originally, the director was supposed to be Kinji Fukasaku, and the leading star Takeshi Kitano, but Fukasaku gave up and Kitano took over, rewriting the script from a comedy to a drama. He became an established director by making the yakuza films 
Boiling Point (3-4 x jűgatsu, 1990) and 
Sonatine (1993), romantic drama 
A Scene at the Sea  (Ano natsu, ichiban shizukana umi, 1991), comedy 
Getting Any? (Minnâ-yatteruka!, 1994) and drama 
Kids Return (Kizzu ritân, 1996). He achieved international success with the crime drama 
Fireworks (Hana-bi, 1997), which won the Golden Lion in Venice in 1997. He also directed 
Kikujirô no natsu (1999), 
Brother (2000), the first film he made outside of Japan, the romantic drama 
Dolls (2002.), the samurai film 
Zatôichi (2003), a surreal biography 
Takeshis' (2005), the comedy 
Glory to the Filmmaker! (Kantoku Banzai!, 2007), 
Achilles and the Tortoise (Akiresu to kame, 2008) and 
Outrage (Autoreiji, 2010).