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  1. Kōzaburō Yoshimura (吉村 公三郎, Yoshimura Kōzaburō, 9 September 1911 – 7 November 2000) was a Japanese film director.

  2. Kôzaburô Yoshimura was born on 9 September 1911 in Hiroshima, Japan. He was a director and writer, known for Anjô-ke no butôkai (1947), A Night to Remember (1962) and Clothes of Deception (1951). He died on 7 November 2000 in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan.

    • Kôzaburô Yoshimura
    • November 7, 2000
    • September 9, 1911
  3. Kozaburo YOSHIMURA (September 9, 1911 – November 7, 2000) was a movie director during the Showa period. He had four children and his eldest son is the NHK commentator, Hidemi YOSHIMURA.

  4. Japanese director Shindo Kaneto, famed for ghost classic Onibaba, died on 29 May at the age of 100 – three days before the start of a BFI season dedicated to his career and that of long-term collaborator Yoshimura Kozaburo.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Night_RiverNight River - Wikipedia

    Night River (夜の河, Yoru no kawa), also titled Undercurrent and River of Night, is a 1956 Japanese drama film directed by Kōzaburō Yoshimura. [3] It was Yoshimura's first film photographed in colour. [4] The screenplay by Sumie Tanaka is based on a novel by Hisao Sawano. [1] [2]

  6. Kozaburo Yoshimura (1911-2000) is one of the neglected masters of classical Japanese film. An almost exact contemporary of Akira Kurosawa and Keisuke Kinoshita, he was responsible for some of the postwar Japanese cinema’s most compelling dramas, which bear eloquent witness to social change in a rapidly modernising country.

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  8. An Osaka Story (大阪物語, Osaka Monogatari) is a 1957 Japanese historical drama film directed by Kōzaburō Yoshimura. The film had originally been planned by Kenji Mizoguchi, who had adapted several stories by Saikaku Ihara into a script. After Mizoguchi's death, the project was assigned to Yoshimura.