Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The cinema of Japan (日本映画, Nihon eiga), also known domestically as hōga (邦画, "domestic cinema"), has a history that spans more than 100 years. Japan has one of the oldest and largest film industries in the world; as of 2021, it was the fourth largest by number of feature films produced. [4] In 2011, Japan produced 411 feature films ...
Lists of films produced in Japan include: List of Japanese films before 1910. List of Japanese films of the 1910s. List of Japanese films of the 1920s. List of Japanese films of the 1930s. List of Japanese films of the 1940s. Lists of Japanese films of the 1950s. Lists of Japanese films of the 1960s.
Farewell, My Dear Cramer: First Touch. Fate/kaleid liner Prisma Illya: Licht - The Nameless Girl. Film Guru Guru. First Human Giatrus. The Five Star Stories. Fruits Basket: Prelude. Fuichin-san. Fujiko's Lie. Fuse Teppō Musume no Torimonochō.
D. Dog of Flanders (TV series) Doraemon: Nobita and the Haunts of Evil. Doraemon: Nobita and the New Steel Troops—Winged Angels. Doraemon: Nobita and the Steel Troops. Doraemon: Nobita and the Tin Labyrinth. Doraemon: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey. Drifting Home.
B. Batman Ninja. Batman Ninja vs. Yakuza League. Benkei tai Ushiwaka. Blood: The Last Vampire. The Book of the Dead (film) The Boy and the Heron.
The Super Sentai Series (スーパー戦隊シリーズ, Sūpā Sentai Shirīzu) is a Japanese superhero team metaseries and media franchise consisting of television series and films produced by Toei Company and Bandai, and aired by TV Asahi. The shows are of the tokusatsu genre, featuring live action characters and colorful special effects ...
The culture of Japan has changed greatly over the millennia, from the country's prehistoric Jōmon period, to its contemporary modern culture, which absorbs influences from Asia and other regions of the world. [1] Since the Jomon period, ancestral groups like the Yayoi and Kofun, who arrived to Japan from Korea and China, respectively, have ...
Japanese. Box office. $5.4 million [1] Dolls (Japanese: ドールズ, Hepburn: Dōruzu) is a 2002 Japanese film written, edited and directed by Japanese director Takeshi Kitano. A highly stylized art film, Dolls is part of Kitano's non- crime film oeuvre, like 1991's A Scene at the Sea, and unlike most of his other films, he does not act in it.