Аватар персоны Keinosuke Uekusa

Keinosuke Uekusa

Writer
No biography

05-03-1910

Birthday

Pisces

Zodiac Sign

-

Genres

0

Total Films

Also known as (male)

Tokyo, Japan

Place of Birth

Popular works









Creative career

actor

0 Works

producer

0 Works

director

13 Works

writer

13 Works

other

0 Works

Run Melos!

Run Melos!

Hashire Melos! is the title of two Japanese animated films. The first was directed by Tomoharu Katsumata and released on Japanese television on February 7, 1981. It was either 68 or 87 minutes long, and its official title did not include the exclamation mark on the end. The second, with the exclamation mark, was a 107-minute remake of the first and was released on July 25, 1992. It featured direction and screenplay by Masaaki Osumi, music by Kazumasa Oda, art by Hiroyuki Okiura and Satoshi Kon, and background art by Hiroshi Ohno. Both were produced by Toei Company Ltd. Visual 80, and both were based on the original short story written by Osamu Dazai in 1940.
6.4

Year:

1981

All My Children

All My Children

School teachers responsible for the lives of their students work to evacuate Allied bombings near the end of WWII.
7.2

Year:

1963

The Song of the Season

The Song of the Season

A touching love story about a heroine who loses her parents in the war and tries to keep her pure love alive despite the many difficulties she faces.
0.0

Year:

1961

Alakazam the Great!

Alakazam the Great!

A monkey king who learns the secrets of magic goes on a spree and causes no end of aggravation for the gods, who finally imprison him. In order to make up for all the trouble he's caused, he is sent on a mission to accompany a prince who is the son of the gods on a journey through a land filled with dangers, monsters, cannibals and demons.
5.4

Year:

1960

Sotobori murder case

Sotobori murder case

A taxi driver hits a woman on the streets. He takes care of her while she gets better. While realizing they're both at a brink in their lives they'll start falling for each other against their odds.
0.0

Year:

1960

The Outsiders

The Outsiders

A drama about relations between Japanese immigrants and the indigenous Ainu on Hokkaido, the most northerly island of Japan. From a novel by Taijun Takeda.
0.0

Year:

1958

The Whisper of Spring

The Whisper of Spring

After graduating from a high school in the Seto Inland Sea, Koji, a childhood friend of Yaeko, went to Tokyo to enter university wearing a heartfelt sweater.
0.0

Year:

1952

The Wind Blows Twice

The Wind Blows Twice

Kanae, who broke up with her husband and moved to her uncle's house, met two men when her father, a university professor, collapsed. Michihara, a wealthy man and Miyashita, a youth scholar. Kanae is attracted to Miyashita, but ...
0.0

Year:

1952

Weeping Doll

Weeping Doll

A Hibari Misora musical about an impoverished girl and her brother in Postwar Japan.
0.0

Year:

1951

Drunken Angel

Drunken Angel

Doctor Sanada treats gangster Matsunaga after he is wounded in a gunfight, and discovers that he is suffering from tuberculosis. Sanada tries to convince Matsunaga to stay for treatment, which would drastically change his lifestyle. They form an uneasy friendship until Matsunaga's old boss Okada returns from prison.
7.6

Year:

1948

One Wonderful Sunday

One Wonderful Sunday

Yuzo and his fiancée Masako spend their Sunday afternoon together, trying to have a good time on just thirty-five yen. They manage to have many small adventures, especially because Masako's optimism and belief in dreams is able to lift Yuzo from his realistic despair.
7.3

Year:

1947

Once More

Once More

A romance with political overtones about the relationship of a sheltered bourgeois woman and a doctor who devotes himself to caring for the poor. Over a ten-year period - from 1936 through the war - they find each other and are separated again by the events of those tumultuous days.
6.2

Year:

1947

Kurama Tengu

Kurama Tengu

This is Kanjûrô Arashi's first film with Nikkatsu after his independent production company went bankrupt (many of these independent companies went bankrupt shortly after the transition to sound). As he is mostly famous for his portrait of Kurama tengu (and on the other hand, he's the definitive actor for Kurama Tengu as well), Nikkatsu made another version of Kurama tengu, co-directed by Masahiro Makino & Sadatsugu Matsuda who are both sons of Shozo Makino. Scripted by Yoshitake Hisa, a jidaigeki specialist who later scripted several Toei All-Star Jidaigeki.
0.0

Year:

1938