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Parade at PIFF 2009!

September 29, 2009 tatsuyaphkp Leave a comment

It has been announced that Tatsuya’s movie Parade (パレード) is going to be shown at the 14th Pusan International Film Festival (08-16 October 2009). Parade will be showing on the 12th, 13th and 14th. Tatsuya will also be on a Q&A panel with other members of the cast on 14th October. This will be Parade’s World Premiere. The movie is officially set to be released in 2010.

Click here for more information about the PIFF2009

Kenichi Matsuyama rejoins Tatsuya Fujiwara for “Kaiji”

September 27, 2009 tatsuyaphkp Leave a comment

Actor Kenichi Matsuyama (24) has been revealed as a supporting cast member in the upcoming movie “Kaiji,” which stars Tatsuya Fujiwara (27). This reunites the pair, who last worked together in the hit live-action “Death Note” films in 2006.

“Kaiji” is based on Nobuyuki Fukumoto’s popular manga about a gambler named Kaiji (Fujiwara) stuck in a dangerous game trying to clear an enormous debt. Matsuyama plays Kaiji’s colleague Sahara, who shares a similar fate.

The “Kaiji” movie was first announced last year and has been scheduled for an October 10 release. The supporting cast includes Yuki Amami and Teruyuki Kagawa.

Source: Tokyograph.com

YUI sings two tunes for “Kaiji”

September 27, 2009 tatsuyaphkp Leave a comment

Two similar news:

YUI has been tapped to provide the theme song and an insert song for the manga-to-movie adaptation “Kaiji,” which stars Tatsuya Fujiwara as a gambler trying to erase an enormous debt.

Initially, YUI was only asked to provide the theme, but director Toya Sato ended up using two of her tunes. “It’s all too much” will serve as the theme song, while “Never say die” will be heard during the film.

“Kaiji” is set to open in theaters on October 10. YUI’s two songs will apparently be released as a double A-side single sometime in the same month.

Source: Tokyograph.com

Singer-songwriter YUI will sing the theme song for the talked about new movie Kaiji that brings together Death Note stars Fujiwara Tatsuya and Matsuyama Kenichi. YUI’s upcoming single It’s All too much will be the theme song, and Never say die will be featured as an inserted song. The double A-side single is scheduled for release in October; the film will open on October 10.

Helmed by Sato Toya, Kaiji revolves around Fujiwara’s Ito Kaiji, who leads a life in poverty and debt and tries to change his destiny in an all-deciding gamble. The film is based on the manga Tobaku Mokushiroku Kaiji (a.k.a. “Ultimate Survivor Kaiji”) by Fukumoto Nobuyuki which started serialization in 1996. The series turned into a bestseller with accumulated sales of over 13 million, and won Fukumoto a Kodansha Manga Award. Besides Fujiwara and Matsuyama, Kaiji’s cast also includes Amami Yuki, Kagawa Teruyuki, Yamamoto Taro, Matsuo Suzuki, and Sato Kei.

Source: Yesasia.com

Isao Yukisada goes on “Parade”

Director Isao Yukisada is working on a screen adaptation of author Shuichi Yoshida’s first full-length novel, “Parade,” which won the Yamamoto Shugoro Prize in 2002.

Yukisada has apparently been hoping to make a movie out of the book ever since it was published in 2002. The story revolves around an unusual group of five young adults living together in a 2LDK apartment (two bedrooms, living room, dining room, and kitchen). Despite sharing such a small space, it turns out in the end that they really don’t know much about each other.

Yukisada has assembled a talented young cast for the movie. Tatsuya Fujiwara stars as Naoki, an employee of a film distribution company. Karina plays the illustrator Miki, while Shihori Kanjiya is the unemployed Kotomi and Keisuke Koide is the college student Ryosuke. Around the same time that a string of disturbing incidents occurs in their neighborhood, Miki meets a male prostitute named Satoru (Kento Hayashi), who ends up also living in the apartment.

In addition to directing, Yukisada wrote the screenplay for the adaptation. Filming started on May 15 and will continue until mid-June. The movie is currently scheduled for release in 2010.

Source: Tokyograph.com

Swords and slapstick

April 11, 2009 tatsuyaphkp Leave a comment
Young blades: Tatsuya Fujiwara (left) in the title role of Hisashi Inoue's long-awaited "Musashi" and Shun Oguri as his rival, Kojiro Sasaki  HORIPRO

Young blades: Tatsuya Fujiwara (left) in the title role of Hisashi Inoue's long-awaited "Musashi" and Shun Oguri as his rival, Kojiro Sasaki HORIPRO

Swords and slapstick Injecting some humor into the gory tale of Musashi

By NOBUKO TANAKA
Special to The Japan Times

In Los Angeles last week, the showdown in the World Baseball Classic between Japan’s “Samurai” and their South Korean rivals had TV audiences gripped. So, too, were those at Saitama Arts Theater, who witnessed an acting duel between 26-year-olds Tatsuya Fujiwara and Shun Oguri in “Musashi,” a hilarious samurai sword-fighting tale directed by the theater’s resident dramatist, Yukio Ninagawa.

Written by Hisashi Inoue, former president of the Japan Pen Club, “Musashi” is led by the performances of these two, both Ninagawa favorites. Fujiwara made his career debut aged 15 at the Barbican in London in Ninagawa’s production of “Shintokumaru (by Shuji Terayama),” while Oguri performed for English audiences in 2006 with a role in Ninagawa’s version of “Titus Andronicus” at Stratford-upon-Avon in the Royal Shakespeare Company’s “Complete Works” festival.

Having last shared a stage in 2003 in Ninagawa’s “Hamlet,” when Fujiwara played Hamlet and Oguri was Fortinbras, the two young blades cross swords again in a work based on the life of the wandering samurai swordsman Musashi Miyamoto (1584-1645) and his famous encounter in 1612, the Duel of Ganryu Island with a rival, Kojiro Sasaki (1585-1612?).

The curtain rises at the climactic moment of the duel as the rivals — Fujiwara in the title role and Oguri as Sasaki — stare at each other against the backdrop of a setting sun. In a scene revisited in countless Japanese works of fiction, TV and film dramas, anime and manga, Musashi fells Kojiro on a beach, before the stage is plunged into darkness.

Rather than flashing back to what led to this moment, though, Inoue draws on something he noticed in “Musashi” by Eiji Yoshikawa, the definitive historical novel of the samurai’s life that was serialized in the Asahi newspaper from 1935 till 1939; the book never says that Kojiro died, only that Musashi is left standing over him, finding “there was still a trace of breath,” and thinking to himself, “with the right treatment he may recover.”

Thus in Inoue’s “Musashi,” Musashi and Kojiro meet again six years later at a Zen temple in Kamakura. The 74-year old Inoue says his version of the play has been more than 20 years in the making. Takeo Hori, the 76-year-old founder and head of the theatrical production company Horipro, asked him to write a Broadway musical version of the Musashi story for him in 1985. Inoue didn’t get it done in time for production, though, and only recently has come back to the theme.

So why revisit it now?

“Recently I’ve become aware that I might die tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow?” Inoue says. “It could happen to me anytime. But then I remembered that I can’t die before I complete ‘Musashi,’ because I felt bad about letting Hori-san down after he worked so hard to stage it on Broadway.

“So I called him up and told him I would write it for him now. If he didn’t like it or want it, then he was free to throw it into the bin.”

Like the second meeting of the old foes Musashi and Kojiro at that Kamakura temple, Inoue’s intriguing “Musashi” was worth waiting for. Upon meeting again, Kojiro challenges Musashi to a duel in three days’ time. Both of them stay at the temple, each meditating deeply on how to kill the other. It’s a fascinating meaning-of-life scenario that Inoue invests with side-splitting humor to craft a powerful, life-affirming message.

As for performances, it is difficult to say whether Fujiwara or Oguri comes out on top in the battle, and the dramatic tension between them keeps the whole play taut while the other cast members, including veteran actors Kazunaga Tsuji and Kotaro Yoshida, draw plenty of laughs with their physical acting. Although the question of which of these two brilliant samurai is going to prevail is absorbing, eventually it is each character’s distinct humanity that is most compelling. “Musashi” runs an improbably speedy 3 1/2 hours, and Horipro hopes to take the play to England in 2010.

“Musashi” runs till April 19 at the Saitama Arts Theater, an 8-minute walk from JR Yonohonmachi Station on the Saikyo Line. It then travels to Umeda Arts Theater: Theater Drama City in Osaka, showing April 25-May 10. For more details, call (03) 3490-4949 or visit hpot.jp

Source: Japantimes.co.jp