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#Yoshio Nakamura
taffyvontrips · 2 years
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John Surtees at the Monaco GP, May 7th 1967, ft. Yoshio Nakamura, Honda team manager  
Photographed by Rainer Schlegelmilch
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shihlun · 2 years
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Genjiro Arato
- The Girl of the Silence AKA Father Fucker
1995
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movielosophy · 10 months
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Ishiko to Haneo | kids know
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demifiendrsa · 14 days
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Look Back - PV
The anime film adaptation of Chainsaw Man creator Tatsuki Fujimoto’s Look Back one-shot manga will hit theaters in Japan on June 28, 2024.
Singer urara will perform "Light song" composed by haruka nakamura.
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Poster
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Mizuki Yoshida as Kyōmoto
Yūmi Kawai as Fujino
Staff
Original Creator: Tatsuki Fujimoto
Director: Kiyotaka Oshiyama
Screenplay: Kiyotaka Oshiyama
Character Design: Kiyotaka Oshiyama
Art Director: Kiyoshi Sameshima
Art Director Assistants: Yoshio Harisaki, Takashi Omori
Color Key Artist: Maya Kusumoto
Compositing Director of Photography: Kazuto Izumita
Editing: Kiyoshi Hirose
Sound Director: Eriko Kimura
Music: Haruka Nakamura
Animation Production: Studio Durian
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docrotten · 1 month
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THE H-MAN (1958, BIJO TO EKITAI NINGEN) – Episode 173 – Decades Of Horror: The Classic Era
“What if by some bizarre phenomenon, his physical form just melted away? Would that fit your crime scene?” Hmm … bizarre phenomenon? Let’s run with it. Join this episode’s Grue-Crew – Daphne Monary-Ernsdorff, Doc Rotten, and Jeff Mohr along with guest host Chris Peters – as they discuss Toho’s The H-Man (1958), directed by the great Ishirô Honda.
Decades of Horror: The Classic Era Episode 173 – The H-Man (1958)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
ANNOUNCEMENT Decades of Horror The Classic Era is partnering with THE CLASSIC SCI-FI MOVIE CHANNEL, THE CLASSIC HORROR MOVIE CHANNEL, and WICKED HORROR TV CHANNEL Which all now include video episodes of The Classic Era! Available on Roku, AppleTV, Amazon FireTV, AndroidTV, Online Website. Across All OTT platforms, as well as mobile, tablet, and desktop. https://classicscifichannel.com/; https://classichorrorchannel.com/; https://wickedhorrortv.com/
When a narcotics dealer disappears, leaving only his clothes, Tokyo police are stumped. A scientist claims H-Bomb tests in the Pacific have created radioactive creatures – “H-Men” – who ooze like slime and liquify anyone they touch.
  Directed by: Ishirô Honda
Writing Credits: Takeshi Kimura (written by); Hideo Unagami (story)
Produced by: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Music by: Masaru Satô
Cinematography by: Hajime Koizumi
Editing by: Kazuji Taira
Production Design by: Takeo Kita
Special Effects by: Eiji Tsuburaya (director of special effects) 
Selected Cast:
Yumi Shirakawa as Chikako Arai, singer in the nightclub
Kenji Sahara as Dr. Masada
Akihiko Hirata as Inspector Tominaga
Eitarô Ozawa as Police Sgt. Miyashita (as Eitaro Ozawa)
Koreya Senda as Dr. Maki
Makoto Satô as Uchida, gangster
Yoshifumi Tajima as Detective Sakata
Yoshio Tsuchiya as Detective Taguchi
Ayumi Sonoda as Emi, lead exotic dancer
Hisaya Itô as Misaki, the dissolved gangster
Nadao Kirino as Shimazaki, the waiter-thug
Naomi Shiraishi as Mineko, Dr. Maki’s assistant
Tetsu Nakamura as Mr. Chin, gangster
Tadao Nakamaru as Detective Seki
Minosuke Yamada as Chief of Inspectors Kusuda
Akira Sera as Horita – Fisherman
Haruya Katô as Sochan – Fisherman
Yasuhiro Shigenobu as Yasukichi – Fisherman
Senkichi Ômura as Daichan, 1st dissolved fisherman (Let me try on the pants!)
Haruo Nakajima as Chosuke, 2nd dissolved fisherman & Liquid Human Being
Shigeo Katô as Matchan, 3rd dissolved fisherman
Paul Frees as Various Voices (American dubbing)
Are you ready to battle an invasion of liquified men? Watch out, The Blob (1958), The H-Man (1958) is here to make you rue the day. Toho Films and director Ishirô Honda (Godzilla, 1954) blend sci-fi, horror, film noir, and… cabaret… for all kinds of horrifying shenanigans. Yup, people liquify left and right throughout the short 87-minute runtime. That’s right, only gooey globs of clothes and hairpieces remain. Join the Grue-Crew along with special guest-host Chris Peters (aka, José) as they revisit and review this unusual yet highly entertaining entry from the film company that gave the world Akira Kurosawa, Ishirô Honda, Godzilla, Mothra, and so much more.
At the time of this writing, The H-Man is available for streaming from the Classic Horror Movie Channel, Classic Sci-Fi Movie Channel, and Tubi.
You may be interested in these other Decades of Horror episodes focused on Ishirô Honda-directed films:
GODZILLA (1954, GOJIRA) – Episode 58 – Decades of Horror: The Classic Era
HALF HUMAN (JÛ JIN YUKI OTOKO, 1955) – Episode 16 – Decades of Horror: The Classic Era
RODAN (1956) – Episode 101 – Decades of Horror: The Classic Era
MATANGO (1963, ATTACK OF THE MUSHROOM PEOPLE) – Episode 135 – Decades of Horror: The Classic Era
THE WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS (FURANKENSHUTAIN NO KAIJÛ: SANDA TAI GAIRA, 1966) – Episode 57 – Decades of Horror: The Classic Era
SPACE AMOEBA (1970, YOG: MONSTER FROM SPACE) – Episode 127 – Decades of Horror 1970s
TERROR OF MECHAGODZILLA (1975) – Episode 165 – Decades of Horror 1970s
Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror: The Classic Era records a new episode every two weeks. Up next in their very flexible schedule, as chosen by guest host Scott Wells is King of the Zombies (1941), a horror comedy directed by Jean Yarbrough (The Devil Bat, 1940; House of Horrors, 1946; The She-Wolf of London, 1946) and starring Dick Purcell, Joanne Woodbury, Henry Victor, and the great Mantan Moreland.
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans: leave them a message or leave a comment on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel, the site, or email the Decades of Horror: The Classic Era podcast hosts at [email protected]
To each of you from each of them, “Thank you so much for watching and listening!”
Check out this episode!
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bubblegeon · 2 years
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Sono contento.
Arimura Kasumi as Ishida Shoko Nakamura Tomoya as Haneoka Yoshio Akaso Eiji as Oba Ao ☂ ISHIKO TO HANEO: SONNA KOTO DE UTTAEMASU? (2022)
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dengswei · 2 years
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NAKAMURA TOMOYA as Haneoka Yoshio in Ishiko to Haneo: Sonna Koto de Uttaemasu? (2022) episode two
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Pîtâ in Funeral Parade of Roses (Toshio Matsumoto, 1969) Cast: Pîtâ, Osamu Ogasawara, Yoshio Tsuchiya, Toyosaburo Uchiyama, Don Madrid, Emiko Azuma, Yoshimi Jo, Koichi Nakamura, Flamenco Umeji, Saako Oota, Taro Manji, Mikio Shibayama, Wataru Hikonagi, Fuchisumi Gomi, Chieko Kobayashi, Yo Sato, Keiichi Takanaga. Screenplay: Toshio Matsumoto. Cinematography: Tatsuo Suzuki. Art direction: Setsu Asakura. Film editing: Toshie Iwasa. Music: Joji Yuasa. Toshio Matsumoto's Funeral Parade of Roses both participates in and parodies the late-1960s avant-garde "underground" film movement, with its reliance on eccentric cuts and random inserts. There's a scene in which the filmmakers are shooting a badly tuned television set, and keep fiddling with the set to get the kind of distorted image they want. And at one point someone quotes the avant-garde filmmaker Jonas Mekas -- and then gets his name wrong, calling him "Menas Jokas." Matsumoto's film keeps the viewer off-balance at all times, moving in and out of what we take to be "reality" to expose that it's all moviemaking. There is, for example, a scene in which the cross-dressing protagonist, Eddie ( Pîtâ), and a Black man, Tony (Don Madrid), seem to be having sex, with lots of pornographic gasping and facial contortions. But then the camera angle shifts and we see that there's a camera crew surrounding the bed where Tony is propped up by himself on the headboard while the camera is focused on the face of Eddie, simulating ecstasy. Even the main story of the film gets its distancing when we cut to the actor who plays Eddie, Pîtâ (or Peter, as the English language screen credits have it), being interviewed about the role he's playing. It's much like his own life, he says, except for the incest part. At this point in the film, we don't know about the incest part, which precipitates the crisis in Eddie's life. Suffice it to say that Matsumoto based a large part of the film on Oedipus Rex. The central story deals with the rivalry between Eddie and Leda (Osamu Ogasawara), the "Madame" of a club that caters to salarymen who want to sleep with gei boi, for the affections of Gonda (Yoshio Tsuchiya), a man who turns out to have more significance in Eddie's life than is at first apparent. There are some longueurs in Matsumoto's film, mostly having to do with the avant-garde sequences but also with a too-long drugged-out orgy scene. (Other people's orgies are invariably boring.) But there are some genuine shocks and some real emotion in the film, and the performance by Pîtâ -- best known as the androgynous Kyoami, the analogue to the Fool in Ran (1985), Akira Kurosawa's reworking of King Lear -- is outstanding.
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hjmarseille · 5 years
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204 Ku at Buin, September 1943. Notable pilots present included: 2nd row, 5th from left, Kiyokuma Okajima; 6th, Cdr Asaichi Tamai; 7th, Akimasa Igarashi; 9th, Sumio Fukuda; 11th, Matsuo Hagiri; 12th, Susumu Ishihara; 3rd row, extreme left, Kiyoshi Sekiya; 4th row, 5th from left, Takao Banno; 10th, Tomita Atake; 11th, Wataru Nakamichi; 5th row, 5th from left, Yoshio Nakamura; 9th, Isamu Ishii; 11th, Toshihisa Shirakawa.
Photo and caption featured in Japanese Naval Fighter Aces: 1932-45 (Stackpole Military History) by Professor Ikuhiko Hata , Yashuho Izawa and Christopher Shores
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twilightronin · 6 years
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Zatōichi 2003
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taffyvontrips · 2 years
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A little more about Yoshio Nakamura
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genevieveetguy · 2 years
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Love Under the Crucifix (Ogin-sama), Kinuyo Tanaka (1962)
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movielosophy · 10 months
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Ishiko to Haneo | Nose signal
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scenesandscreens · 4 years
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Funeral Parade of Roses (1969)
Director - Toshio Matsumoto, Cinematography - Tatsuo Suzuki
"This is my first movie and I'm interested. My circumstances are like his. That's one reason. And the gay life is portrayed beautifully."
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docrotten · 2 years
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MATANGO (ATTACK OF THE MUSHROOM PEOPLE, 1963) – Episode 135 – Decades Of Horror: The Classic Era
“I was confused. I couldn’t decide what to do. Then… I ate them!” Oh, oh. Join this episode’s Grue-Crew – Chad Hunt, Daphne Monary-Ernsdorff, and Jeff Mohr, along with guest host Dirk Rogers – as they journey to a Pacific island and attempt to resist the lure of the deadly mushrooms found in Ishirô Honda’s Matango (Attack of the Mushroom People, 1963) from Toho.
Decades of Horror: The Classic Era Episode 135 – Matango (Attack of the Mushroom People, 1959)
Join the Crew on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel! Subscribe today! And click the alert to get notified of new content! https://youtube.com/gruesomemagazine
ANNOUNCEMENT Decades of Horror The Classic Era is partnering with THE CLASSIC SCI-FI MOVIE CHANNEL, THE CLASSIC HORROR MOVIE CHANNEL, and WICKED HORROR TV CHANNEL Which all now include video episodes of The Classic Era! Available on Roku, AppleTV, Amazon FireTV, AndroidTV, Online Website. Across All OTT platforms, as well as mobile, tablet, and desktop. https://classicscifichannel.com/; https://classichorrorchannel.com/; https://wickedhorrortv.com/
Synopsis: A group of pleasure-seeking young people is stranded on a mysterious island when their boat crashes. One by one they succumb to the lure of the deadly mushrooms.
  Director: Ishirô Honda
Writers: Takeshi Kimura (screenplay); Shin’ichi Hoshi & Masami Fukushima (adaptation); William Hope Hodgson (story by, “The Voice in the Night,” Blue Book Magazine, November 1907); Sakyo Komatsu (uncredited)
Music by: Sadao Bekku
Cinematography by: Hajime Koizumi
Director of special effects: Eiji Tsuburaya 
Chief assistant special effects director: Teruyoshi Nakano
Special effects unit production manager: Shigeru Nakamura
Special effects art director/Special effects set decorator: Akira Watanabe
Costume Design/Art Department: Shigeru Komatsuzaki
Selected Cast:
Akira Kubo as Kenji Murai – Professor
Kumi Mizuno as Mami Sekiguchi – Singer
Kenji Sahara as Senzō Koyama – Sailor
Hiroshi Tachikawa as Etsurō Yoshida – Writer
Yoshio Tsuchiya as Masafumi Kasai – Owner
Hiroshi Koizumi as Naoyuki Sakuta – Skipper
Miki Yashiro as Akiko Sōma – Student
Takuzô Kumagai as Doctor  (billed as Jiro Kumagai)
Yutaka Oka as Doctor
Keisuke Yamada as Doctor
Hideyo Amamoto as Skulking Transitional Matango
Haruo Nakajima as Matango
Toku Ihara as Transitional Matango
Kuniyoshi Kashima as Transitional Matango
Masaki Shinohara as Matango
Kōji Uruki as Matango
Tokio Ōkawa as Matango
In this episode, your Classic Era Grue Crew is joined by Dirk Rogers, a special effects artist with KNB EFX Group and a long-time friend of the show. As the guest host, Dirk chose Matango for this episode’s topic and with the movie’s use of effects – miniatures, suits, prosthetics, set dressing – it’s easy to see why this is one of his favorites. 
Dirk was originally drawn to Matango because it featured a lot of the same players from the Godzilla films. He loves the damp (shall we say moist?) atmosphere, the use of color reminiscent of Mario Bava, the sets, and the miniatures. He’s always loved Matango and feels the English title, Attack of the Mushroom People, doesn’t represent the depth of what you get from the film. Dirk also provides valuable insights into the effects work and the documentation of who did what during the production.
Matango is probably Chad’s first exposure to body horror and the horrors of fungus. He loves the way the story ramps up the terror and the cringeworthy fungus-filled sets. As one of Toho’s best, Matango still holds up for him. Daphne is blown away by the colors and the textures of the mushrooms and the fungi, loving it all over again. Jeff agrees that “Attack of the Mushroom People” sounds kind of hokey and doesn’t represent the depth of the story told in Matango. He loves the concept, the story progression, the creepy and downright icky creatures and fungi, and the movie’s cultural and historical relation to the horrors experienced by the Japanese from the atomic bombs of World War II.
Dirk was turned onto the writings of William Hope Hodgson by this movie as it is developed from Hodgson’s short story, “The Voice in the Night.”  During the episode, the crew discusses several versions of this story, all of which are provided through the following links:
Story: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Voice_in_the_Night
Audio version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASIfPcyTAH0
Suspicion (TV series, 1957-1958), Episode 24: “The Voice in the Night” (aired 24 March 1958); from the story by William Hope Hodgson; starring James Donald, Barbara Rush, Patrick Macnee, James Coburn. This is a very poor resolution but the Classic Era Grue-Crew still enjoyed it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssi6_YWrrxc
If you have been motivated by this episode to catch Matango (and you should be), at the time of this writing, it is available to stream from Classic Horror Movie Channel, Tubi, The Criterion Channel, and various PPV sites. In terms of physical media, Matango is available on DVD.
Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror: The Classic Era records a new episode every two weeks. Up next in their very flexible schedule is one chosen by guest host, the one and only Dave Dreher: The Return of Dracula (1958). 
Please let them know how they’re doing! They want to hear from you – the coolest, grooviest fans: leave them a message or leave a comment on the Gruesome Magazine YouTube channel, the site, or email the Decades of Horror: The Classic Era podcast hosts at [email protected]
To each of you from each of them, “Thank you so much for listening!”
Check out this episode!
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bubblegeon · 2 years
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I just received a request via DM on Twitter. My competence is spreading ...
Nakamura Tomoya as Haneoka Yoshio ☂ ISHIKO TO HANEO: SONNA KOTO DE UTTAEMASU? (2022)
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