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  1. Kiyoshi Kurosawa (黒沢 清, Kurosawa Kiyoshi, born July 19, 1955) is a Japanese film director, screenwriter, film critic, actor, and professor at Tokyo University of the Arts.

  2. Kiyoshi Kurosawa was born on 19 July 1955 in Kobe, Japan. He is a director and writer, known for Tokyo Sonata (2008), Pulse (2001) and Cure (1997).

  3. Sep 17, 2020 · Master of horror” is not traditionally an accolade recognised by the world’s leading film competitions, but for Kiyoshi Kurosawa, it’s proved something of a boon.

  4. With his signature dark, visceral aesthetic, filmmaker Kiyoshi Kurosawa has helped build the reputation of Japan's already acclaimed horror genre. Kurosawa began directing in...

  5. Sep 22, 2020 · Where to begin with Kiyoshi Kurosawa. From his beginnings in J-horror to his recent best director prize at Venice, we pick a beginner’s path through the subtle, supernatural-tinged cinema of Kiyoshi Kurosawa.

  6. Sep 18, 2021 · Kiyoshi Kurosawa talks his "Wife of a Spy", shooting in 8K, tackling the past, confronting the present, and his philosophy of cinema. Kiyoshi Kurosawa is one of the key figures of the Japanese new auteurs' wave that emerged around the 1990s.

  7. Mar 12, 2024 · The name of Kiyoshi Kurosawa is synonymous with a certain style of Japanese horror, and yet no one is synonymous with him; Kurosawa is one of the most distinct filmmakers active today, and one of the prime auteurs that have defined 90s and 2000s Japanese cinema.

  8. Oct 19, 2016 · Japanese filmmaker Kiyoshi Kurosawa's horror films are unlike any other J-horror films. This is partly a matter of cerebral approach, and partly a technical difference: he directs films differently because he conceives of his films with greater, and perhaps more eccentric detail than other J-horror filmmakers.

  9. Kiyoshi Kurosawa was born on 19 July 1955 in Kobe, Japan. He is a director and writer, known for Tokyo Sonata (2008), Pulse (2001) and Cure (1997).

  10. Nov 19, 2019 · Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Leaving the Everyday Behind for the Ends of the Earth. A young Japanese journalist dressed in a neon orange rain suit wades in Lake Aydar in Uzbekistan. Far away from home and her routine, she is in search of a mythical fish, the ‘bramul’.