She also won critical acclaim for her role as Tsubaki Sakurai in the 2001 film Go, which earned her several awards, including the Best Supporting Actress Award of Japanese Academy, the Hōchi Movie Award, and the Kinema Junpō Award.
In 2013, she made her U.S. film debut in 47 Ronin, a Keanu Reeves-led adaptation of the famous Chushingura story of samurai loyalty and revenge. The film was billed as the first ever English-language adaptation of the legend.
She's now under Stardust Promotion.", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/4eDYrw_5c.jpg" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Ito Hideaki", "alternateName": "伊藤英明", "birthDate": "August 3, 1975", "nationality": "Japanese", "description": "Hideaki Ito was born in Nagasaki, Japan. His father was an official in the Japan Self Defense Force and his mother is a housewife. As a child, he became very sick and was hospitalized for about three years. During this time, he said that he wanted to become a pilot because he felt isolated in his hospital bed and wanted to see the world. He originally had no intention of becoming an actor, but when he turned eighteen, his friend's sister helped him apply to a talent competition for young male actors. He came in second place and was signed on to his first talent agency, marking the beginning of his successful career in acting.
Hideaki Ito is most famous for his leading role in "Umizaru", a TV and movie series adapted from a popular manga comic about the lives of rescue diver trainees in Kure, Japan. The series began in 2004 and continued for ten years, finishing in 2014. Each of the Umizaru films ranked in the top 100 highest-grossing films in Japan, including both Japanese and Western films. During this time and since then, Hideaki Ito has been involved in over 50 films and drama series. Notably, he starred in the 2007 film "Sukiyaki Western Django", in which he acted alongside Quentin Tarantino. The film was entered in the 64th Venice Film Festival.
In 2015, he won the award for the Best Supporting Actor in the Japan Academy Film Prize for his role in "Wood Job!". Today, Hideaki Ito is an international household name in many Asian countries including Japan, China, Thailand, and beyond.
He registered marriage to a non-celebrity woman 8 years his junior on October 24, 2014.", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/ZLKNk_5c.jpg" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Negishi Toshie", "alternateName": "根岸季衣", "birthDate": "February 3, 1954", "nationality": "Japanese", "description": "Toshie Negishi is a Japanese film and television actress.", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/eA46n_5c.jpg" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Maiko", "alternateName": "マイコ", "birthDate": "March 15, 1985", "nationality": "Japanese", "description": "Married to actor Satoshi Tsumabuki.", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/kdEWm_5c.jpg" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Nakanishi Miho", "alternateName": "中西美帆, なかにし みほ, Miho Nakanishi", "birthDate": "December 05, 1988", "nationality": "Kobe, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan", "description": "", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/nakanishi-miho.png" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Ichikawa Ebizo XI", "alternateName": "十一代目市川海老藏", "birthDate": "December 6, 1977", "nationality": "Japanese", "description": "Ichikawa Ebizo XI is the eleventh and current holder of the Ebizo name. He is a famous Kabuki, television and film actor and heir to the prestigious Ichikawa clan of kabuki actors.
The son of Ichikawa Danjuro XII, he was born in Tokyo and began his career at the age of six in a 1983 play of Genji Monogatari. In 1985 he was bestowed the name Ichikawa Shinnosuke VII and continued to perform in kabuki under this name until 2003. He made his first television appearance in 1994 in the NHK Taiga drama, Hanna no Ran, which starred his father.
In 2002-2003, he had a starring television role as the great samurai, Miyamoto Musashi, in the NHK drama, Musashi. After the series ended, he starred again as the great warrior in a kabuki drama. He would go on to take part in several plays before his name was changed to Ebizo XI in May 2004.
He has appeared in several commercials, and in his first film role, Deguchi no Nai Umi, (Sea With No Exit) in 2006. He toured Europe, Australia and various other prefectures in Japan doing kabuki. In 2007 he was awarded the L'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres after a performance at the Palais Garnier in Paris. A total of twelve performances of Yoshitsune Senbon Zakura by the Shochiku Grand Kabuki featuring Ebizo were held at Sadler's Wells Theatre in London from June 4 to 15, 2010.
On November 25, 2010, he was assaulted in the early morning hours while out drinking with Kabuka friends in Tokyo's Nishi-Azabu area. According to the Japanese press, he forced the man to drink tequila from an ashtray. Ebizo returned home, where his wife Kobayashi Mao discovered his wounds, which included a depressed fracture to a cheekbone and severe bruising, and called the police, after which he was rushed to Toranomon Hospital. As a result of the injuries suffered there was speculation that Ebizo may have had to retire, being unable to do the cross-eyed nirami glare important in kabuki leads. Theatre operator Shochiku suspended him from kabuki as a result of the incident.
He starred in Takashi Miike's 2011 3D remake of Hara-Kiri. On July 2, 2011, Ebizõ returned to the stage at the July Grand Kabuki performance at the Shinbashi playhouse in Tokyo. In 2015, he was appointed the sightseeing ambassador of Narita City.
His father, Ishikawa Danjuro XII died in 2013. He was married to Mao Kobayashi, an actress and presenter in March 2010 up until her death in 2017 from breast cancer which he announced to the public through an emergency press conference. . On July 25th, 2011 Mao gave birth to their first daughter.
In 2019, he announced his intentions to take up the stage name Danjuro. From May 2020, he will be known as Ishikawa Danjuro XIII. However, with the outbreak of COVID-19 pandemic, the naming ceremony cannot be held and hence he still continues holding the current title. He performed a kabuki dance at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics opening ceremony.
(Source: Wikipedia, Japan Times)", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/Px8Bzc.jpg" } ], "director": [ { "@type": "Person", "name": "Miike Takashi", "alternateName": "三池崇史", "birthDate": "August 24, 1960", "nationality": "Japanese", "description": "Miike Takashi is a highly prolific and controversial Japanese filmmaker. He has directed over ninety theatrical, video, and television productions since his debut in 1991. Miike is credited with directing fifteen productions in the years 2001 and 2002 alone. His films range from violent and bizarre to dramatic and family-friendly.
Miike was born to Korean parents in Yao, Osaka, Japan, an area inhabited by poor working-class immigrants from the Korean Peninsula. His family originally emigrated to Kumamoto Prefecture. During World War II, his grandfather was stationed in China and Korea, and his father was born in Seoul in today's South Korea. His father worked as a welder and his mother was a seamstress. Although he claimed to have attended classes only rarely, he graduated from Yokohama Vocational School of Broadcast and Film (Yokohama Hōsō Eiga Senmon Gakko) under the guidance of a renowned filmmaker Shohei Imamura, the founder and Dean of that institution.
One of his most controversial films was the ultra-violent Ichi the Killer (2001), adapted from a manga of the same name and starring Tadanobu Asano as a sadomasochistic yakuza enforcer. The extreme violence was initially exploited to promote the film: during its international premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2001, the audience received "barf bags" emblazoned with the film's logo as a promotional gimmick (one typically flamboyant gory killing involves a character slicing a man in half from head to groin, and severing another's face, which then slides down a nearby wall).
However, the British Board of Film Classification refused to allow the release of the film uncut in Britain, citing its extreme levels of sexual violence towards women. In Hong Kong, 15 minutes of footage were cut. In the United States, it has been shown uncut (unrated). An uncut DVD was also released in the Benelux.
In 2005, Miike was invited to direct an episode of the Masters of Horror anthology series. The series, featuring episodes by a range of established horror directors such as John Carpenter, Tobe Hooper, and Dario Argento, was supposed to provide directors with relative creative freedom and relaxed restrictions on violent and sexual content (some violent content was edited from the Dario Argento-directed episode Jenifer). However, when the Showtime cable network acquired the rights to the series, the Miike-directed episode Imprint was deemed too disturbing for the network. Showtime canceled it from the broadcast lineup even after extended negotiations, though it was retained as part of the series DVD release. Mick Garris, creator and executive producer of the series, described the episode as "amazing, but hard even for me to watch... definitely the most disturbing film I've ever seen".", "image": "https://i.hndrama.com/image/people/ZK0NL_5c.jpg" } ], "trailer": { "@type": "VideoObject", "name": "Trailer for Over Your Dead Body", "embedUrl": "https://www.youtube.com/embed/", "thumbnailUrl": "https://img.youtube.com/vi//0.jpg" }, "productionCompany": [ { "@type": "Organization", "name": "Unknown", "description": "", "logo": "/app/manga/themes/kissasian/assets/images/noposter.jpg" } ], "countryOfOrigin": { "@type": "Country", "name": "Japan" }, "numberOfEpisodes": "1", "episode": [ { "@type": "TVEpisode", "name": "Episode 1", "url": "https://ww7.kissasian.video/watch/over-your-dead-body/episode-1.html", "episodeNumber": 1, "datePublished": "2015-03-09" } ]
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An actor named Kosuke Hasegawa plays the role of Iemon in a stage version of Yotsuya Kaiden and his lover Miyuki plays Oiwa. However, as they delve deeper into their respective performances, the line between fantasy and reality becomes obscured until the murderous, vengeful themes of the play bleed into their own relationship.Watch drama online for free.
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