Kôji Wakamatsu
Kôji Wakamatsu was born on Apr 01, 1936 in Japan. Kôji Wakamatsu's big-screen debut came with Sweet Trap directed by Kôji Wakamatsu in 1963. Kôji Wakamatsu is known for United Red Army directed by Kôji Wakamatsu, Maki Sakai stars as Mieko Toyama and Arata Iura as Hiroshi Sakaguchi. Kôji Wakamatsu has got 10 awards and 6 nominations so far. The most recent award Kôji Wakamatsu achieved is Pusan International Film Festival. The upcoming new movie Kôji Wakamatsu plays is The Millennial Rapture which will be released on Mar 09, 2013.
The pioneering Kôji Wakamatsu (born Ito Takashi) was a contemporary of Oshima Nagisa and equally controversial, yet not as famous. The man was born in Miyagi Prefecture in the north of Japan before dropping out of agricultural school, some say following a physical altercation, moving to Tokyo at age seventeen, joining the yakuza and landing in prison for a year as a consequence. While with the yakuza he would work for the mob collecting payments on film sets among other thuggery. Upon release and following odd jobs he became an assistant to a film director and eventually make his own pink film erotic feature called Sweet Trap in 1963. Twenty or so films, including several acclaimed ones for Nikkatsu Studio, later he created his own Wakamatsu production where he and crew would push back against norms by shooting softcore pink features, violent movies, left-wing resistance cuts and even internationally bent movies on topics like the oppression of the Palestinian nation and the Japanese underground. His efforts would take him to events like the Berlin Film Festival - occasionally to the annoyance of the official motion picture association of Japan - and have him work with other avant-garde directors like the aforementioned Oshima. He would also be blacklisted by foreign governments like the United States, which imposed a travel ban on him. Both he and the mainstream moved closer to one another eventually and before his death in a car accident where he was hit by a taxi in 2012 several of his films had garnered mainstream interest and miscellaneous Japanese and foreign awards. At the time of his death he was returning from a meeting regarding his latest project, which concerned Japan's nuclear industry lobby and the Tokyo-based TEPCO company. The topical subject matter followed on the heels of the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
Birthday
Apr 01, 1936Place of Birth
Wakuya-machi, Tôda-gun, Miyagi, Japan
Known For
Awards
10 wins & 6 nominations
Movies & TV Shows
- 2012
writer, director, producer
6.5 - 2012
11.25: The Day He Chose His Own Fate
director, producer
6.1 - 2010
director, producer
6.7 - 2007
writer, director, producer
7.1 - 2004
director
5.5 - 1995
writer, director
7.0 - 1992
director
5.3 - 1990
director, producer
6.2 - 1982
producer
5.1 - 19766.6
- 1972
director, producer
6.3 - 1970
director, producer
7.1 - 19696.3
- 1969
producer, director
7.2 - 1969
director, producer
6.4 - 1969
producer
6.2 - 1968
director
4.4 - 19676.5
- 1966
producer
6.6 - 1965
producer, writer, director
7.1 - 1963
director
6.1