Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Battle Royale was released on December 16, 2000, in Japan. [6] [7] Over the next two years, Battle Royale was distributed to cinemas in 22 countries, [8] across Asia, Australia, Europe, and South America (in addition to Mexico), gaining early cult film followings in France, the United Kingdom, Germany, Spain, and the Philippines.
Battle Royale II: Requiem (Japanese: バトル・ロワイアルII 鎮魂歌, Hepburn: Batoru Rowaiaru Tsū Rekuiemu) is a 2003 Japanese dystopian action film directed by Kinji Fukasaku and Kenta Fukasaku, who co-wrote the screenplay with Norio Kida.
Battle Royale: Kinji Fukasaku: Tatsuya Fujiwara: Thriller [1] Brother: Takeshi Kitano: Beat Takeshi, Omar Epps, Claude Maki: Crime [2] Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2: The Sealed Card: Morio Asaka: Animation: Case Closed: Captured in Her Eyes: Kanetsugu Kodama: Animation [3] Chaos: Hideo Nakata: Miki Nakatani, Masato Hagiwara, Ken Mitsuishi: Mystery ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; ... The title track was the ending theme for the popular Japanese film Battle Royale, also released in 2000.
Tsukamoto portrayed the character Shinji Mimura in the controversial film Battle Royale. He also portrayed the character Gion Toji in the video game Ryū ga Gotoku Kenzan! Both his voice and likeness that was captured using facial scanning technology. He narrated the 2015 film Junk Story, which documents the life of musician hide. [1]
A Battle of Wits (2006 film) Battle Royale (film) Battle Royale II: Requiem; Battlefield Baseball; Bayside Shakedown 2; Be a Man! Samurai School; Be Sure to Share; Beauty (2009 film) Best Wishes for Tomorrow; Beyblade: Fierce Battle; Big Bang Love, Juvenile A; Big Man Japan; Black Belt (2007 film) Blind Beast vs. Dwarf; Blindness (2008 film ...
She was previously employed under Horipro, a giant Japanese model and talent agency. She acted in the 2006 Japanese drama film Humoresque: Sakasama no Chou (literally Humoresque: The Upside Down Butterfly). She has acted in films including Toso Kuso Tawake, Lament of the Lamb, Robo Rock and Detroit Metal City, and Yukan Club.
Map of Okishima Island, seen inside the cover of the 2003 English translation. Battle Royale takes place in a fictional fascist Japan in the year 1997. The state, known as the Republic of Greater East Asia (大東亜共和国, Dai Tōa Kyōwakoku), arose after an alternate World War II where Japan emerged victorious, and a rebellion was put down by the combined military and police forces.