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Kōichi Saitō (film director)

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Name
  
Koichi Saito

Education
  
Koichi Saito (film director) 733251ooo7jp17nenndosaitoukantokujpg
Born
  
February 3, 1929 (
1929-02-03
)

Occupation
  
Film director, photographer

Died
  
November 28, 2009, Hino, Tokyo, Japan

Movies
  
Journey Into Solitude, The Rendezvous, Tsugaru Folk Song, The Homeless, Shadow of Deception, Bokyo

Awards
  
Mainichi Eiga Concours Award for Best Film

Similar People
  
Yoko Takahashi, Rentaro Mikuni, Keiko Kishi, Kyoko Enami, Fumio Ishimori

Kōichi Saitō (斎藤 耕一, Saitō Kōichi, 3 February 1929 – 28 November 2009) was a Japanese film director and photographer.

Contents

Career

Kōichi Saitō (film director) 733251ooo7jp17nenndosaitoukantokujpg

Born in Tokyo, Saitō started studying at Rikkyo University but ended up graduating from the Tokyo College of Photography (currently Tokyo Polytechnic University). He was initially a movie stills photographer at Nikkatsu before launching his own production company, Saito Productions, and directing his first film, Tsubuyaki no Jō, "a low-budget, independent film with a visual flair that earned comparisons with Claude Lelouch and with Richard Lester’s Beatles films, including A Hard Day’s Night". Some of his first films were youth movies featuring Group Sounds music. He came to prominence in the early 1970s with a series of movies about young people escaping to or searching for their identity in the countryside. He won the best director award at the 1972 Mainichi Film Awards. His Tsugaru jongarabushi was selected the best film of 1973 in the Kinema Junpo poll of critics. Saitō continued directing into his seventies and also made some documentaries. He was awarded the Order of the Rising Sun (4th Class, Gold Rays with Rosette) in 2000.

Selected filmography

  • Tsubuyaki no Jō (1967)
  • Chiisana sunakku (1968)
  • Yakusoku (1972; The Rendezvous)
  • Tabi no omosa (1972)
  • Tsugaru jongarabushi (1973; Tsugaru Folk Song)
  • Yadonashi (1974; The Homeless)
  • References

    Kōichi Saitō (film director) Wikipedia