Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Men Who Tread on the Tiger's Tail (Japanese: 虎の尾を踏む男達, Hepburn: Tora no O o Fumu Otokotachi) is a 1945 Japanese period drama film written and directed by Akira Kurosawa, based on the kabuki play Kanjinchō, which is in turn based on the Noh play Ataka.
Film sets of Yamato Film sets of Yamato. Yamato (男たちの大和, Otoko-tachi no Yamato, literally "The Men's Yamato") is a 2005 Japanese war film.It was directed by Junya Satō and is based on a book by Jun Henmi.
98.12.28 Otokotachi no Wakare (98.12.28 男達の別れ) is the third and final live album by Japanese dub band Fishmans. It documents the band's final live performance with frontman Shinji Sato . The show was recorded and filmed at Akasaka Blitz on December 28, 1998, and was first released on September 29, 1999, by Polydor Records in Japan.
Tomodachi, the fictional leader of a fictional apocalyptic sect in the manga 20th Century Boys by Naoki Urasawa; Tomodachi, an award-winning play by Kōbō Abe; Tomodachi, a chapter in volume one of the One Piece manga by Eiichiro Oda
Men Without Women (Japanese: 女のいない男たち, Hepburn: Onna no inai otokotachi) is a 2014 collection of short stories by Japanese author Haruki Murakami, translated and published in English in 2017. The stories are about men who have lost women in their lives, usually to other men or death.
Otokotachi no Yamato: Historical; War Pacchigi! Kazuyuki Izutsu: Erika Sawajiri, Shun Shioya: Poketto Monsutā Adobansu Jenerēshon Myū and the Wave Guiding Hero Rukario: Anime: The Princess in the Birdcage Kingdom: Itsuro Kawasaki: Miyu Irino, Yui Makino, Tetsu Inada, Daisuke Namikawa, Mika Kikuchi: Anime: Based on a manga Princess Raccoon ...
The following is a list of works, both in film and other media, for which the Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa made some documented creative contribution. This includes a complete list of films with which he was involved (including the films on which he worked as assistant director before becoming a full director), as well as his little-known contributions to theater, television and literature.
In Shinto faith, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki) (国常立尊, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki (no-Mikoto here being an honorific of divinity) or Kuni-toko-tachi [1] is one of the two Gods born from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" [2] when the Earth was chaotic.