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Naked Photos of Kiyoshi Kurosawa are available at MaleStars.com. They currently feature over 65,000 Nude Pics, Biographies, Video Clips, Articles, and Movie Reviews of famous stars.

 

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Actresses who appeared with Kiyoshi Kurosawa on screen:

Koyuki


Kiyoshi Kurosawa
Birthday: July 19, 1955

Birth Place: Kobe, Hyogo, Japan
Height: 0' 0"

Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Kiyoshi Kurosawa. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@actorsofhollywood.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

 

Biography

Kiyoshi Kurosawa's films are unique in the film world. They are genre flicks that seem to defy the confines of genre. They are philosophical treatises on the individual in society, often as brilliant as they are obscure, though they still manage to thrill, amuse, and entertain. Widely regarded as one of the most talented filmmakers of New Japanese Cinema (other such directors include Shinji Somai, Takashi Miike, and Nobuhiro Suwa), Kurosawa is a bold new voice in World Cinema.Born in Kobe in 1955, Kurosawa (no relation to Akira Kurosawa) studied film under noted theorist Shigehiko Hasumi at Rikkyo University. An avid amateur 8mm filmmaker since high school, Kurosawa's short film Shigarami was selected as part of the 1981 PIA Film Festival, a prestigious showcase for young talent in Japan. From there, he landed a job as assistant director with Shinji Somai. In 1983, he directed his first feature, The Kandagawa Wars. He first garnered critical attention with his next effort, The Excitement of the Do-Re-Mi-Fa Girl, starring actor-turned-director Juzo Itami. Though financed as a pink eiga — the soft-core porn genre that dominated much of the Japanese domestic market through the 1970s — the film defiantly skews hard and fast categorization. Sex scenes are intercut with extended discussion on philosophy. Stylistically, the film bares more commonality with Jean-Luc Godard and Seijun Suzuki than with mainstream pinku directors like Noboru Tanaka. Since then, he steadily gained cult recognition for his films, particularly for his Suit Yourself or Shoot Yourself series.His big break came with the supernatural crime thriller Cure (1997). Enigmatic, creepy, and genuinely frightening, Cure wowed audiences with its intensity and impressed intellectuals with its postmodern exploration of identity. Moreover, the film garnered a great deal of critical buzz on the festival circuit, including Toronto, Rotterdam, and San Francisco. Star Koji Yakusho won Best Actor at the Tokyo Film Festival. Kurosawa's subsequent films have all displayed his trademark elusiveness and have served to bolster his profile. License to Live (1998) which he wrote with the help of a Sundance Institute Scholarship, was screened at the Berlin Film Festival, while Charisma (1999) was invited to be screened the Director's Week section at Cannes. That same year, his work was showcased as a part of the Toronto Film Festival's Director's Spotlight. On the heels of the low-key drama Barren Illusions and the made for television frightener Seance, Kurosawa crafted Pulse, a slow-burn apocalyptic shocker that many considered to the one of the best horror films of the decade. A quiet, deliberate, and notably restrained tale of dread that would ultimately have all subtlety sapped for a rambunctious American re-make, Pulse spoke soulfully to many modern viewers who felt that their human connection had been woefully lost in the endless quest for technological convenience. Though such subsequent efforts as the existential drama Bright Future and the comedic thriller Doppleganger wouldn't be recieved with nearly as much enthusiasm as Pulse, the tireless director continued to challenge audiences with his philosophically-minded films and soon returned to the realm of horror with The Loft (2005). As with any semi-successful Japanese horror films in the early years of the new millennium, an American remake was quickly announced. When he is not making movies, Kurosawa teaches at the newly formed Film School of Tokyo.

Movie Credits
Sakebi (2006)
Rofuto (2005)
Umezu Kazuo: Kyôfu gekijô - Mushi-tachi no ie (2005)
Ghost Cop (2004)
Dopperugengâ (2003)
Akarui mirai (2003)
Kairo (2001)
Kôrei (2000)
Oinaru genei (1999)
Karisuma (1999)
Ningen gokaku (1998)
Gakkô no kaidan G (1998)
Hebi no michi (1998)
Kumo no hitomi (1998)
Fukushu the Revenge Kienai Kizuato (1997)
Kyua (1997)
Katte ni shiyagare! Eiyû-keikaku (1996)
Katte ni shiyagare!! Narikin keikaku (1996)
Katte ni shiyagare!! Gyakuten keikaku (1996)
Doa 3 (1996)
Katte ni shiyagare!! Ôgon keikaku (1996)
Jigoku no keibîn (1992)
Abunai hanashi mugen monogatari (1989)
Suito Homu (1989)
Do-re-mi-fa-musume no chi wa sawagu (1985)
Kanda-gawa inran senso (1983)

Trivia

  • Is not related to Akira Kurosawa.

Naked Photos of Kiyoshi Kurosawa are available at MaleStars.com. They currently feature over 65,000 Nude Pics, Biographies, Video Clips, Articles, and Movie Reviews of famous stars.

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