Inuzuka Minoru
Alexander Jacoby
a_p_jacoby at yahoo.co.uk
Sat Oct 6 04:44:35 EDT 2007
This is perhaps a somewhat trivial response, but Inuzuka's age was quite exceptional and I wondered - does this make him the last director to die anywhere in the world who actually directed feature films in the twenties?
ALEX
Aaron Gerow <aaron.gerow at yale.edu> wrote:
I'm afraid I had missed this (a student mentioned it to me), but
Inuzuka Minoru, the prolific director and screenwriter, died last month
at the age of 106.
Inuzuka first entered in the industry in the 1920s as a screenwriter at
Shochiku's Shimogamo studio, and it was his relation to that studio
that brought him in contact with Kinugasa Teinosuke. He helped out on A
Page of Madness and began directing under Kinugasa when that director
began producing jidaigeki for Shochiku at Shimogamo. Inuzuka directed
over 50 films, mostly jidaigeki, but few of note. He wrote scripts for
over 150 films, however, including many for hit films at Daiei such as
Shiranui kengyo and numerous Zatoichi films.
He published his autobiography, Eiga wa kagero no gotoku, in 2002 after
having passed the century mark.
Aaron Gerow
KineJapan owner
Assistant Professor
Film Studies Program/East Asian Languages and Literatures
Yale University
For list commands, send "information kinejapan" to
listserver at lists.acs.ohio-state.edu
Kinema Club: http://pears.lib.ohio-state.edu/Markus/Welcome.html
---------------------------------
For ideas on reducing your carbon footprint visit Yahoo! For Good this month.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.yale.edu/pipermail/kinejapan/attachments/20071006/6efab497/attachment.html
More information about the KineJapan
mailing list