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  1. Yoshitarō Nomura (野村 芳太郎, Nomura Yoshitarō, 23 April 1919 – 8 April 2005) was a prolific Japanese film director, film producer, and screenwriter. His first accredited film, Pigeon ( 鳩 , Hato ) , was released in 1952; his last, Kikenna Onna-tachi ( 危険な女たち ) , in 1985.

  2. Yoshitarô Nomura (1919-2005) Yoshitarô Nomura. Yoshitarô Nomura was born on 23 April 1919 in Asakusa, Tokyo, Japan. He was a director and writer, known for The Castle of Sand (1974), Suspicion (1982) and The Incident (1978). He died on 8 April 2005 in Tokyo, Japan.

    • Director, Writer, Producer
    • April 23, 1919
    • Yoshitarô Nomura
    • April 8, 2005
  3. Jul 9, 2017 · The Crime Thrillers of Studio Maverick Yoshitaro Nomura. T he slow-burning 1958 thriller Stakeout begins, as do many films by the prolific genre auteur Yoshitaro Nomura, by showing its principal characters en route to unfamiliar territory. Lasting for nearly eight minutes, this opening sequence documents every stage of the train journey taken ...

  4. One of these, despite a handful of subtitled DVD releases, is Yoshitaro Nomura, whose police thrillers combine the stylistic and narrative economy of Hollywood with a subtle attention to Japanese social realities and the pictorial and symbolic qualities of Japanese landscapes. Nomura (1919-2005) was born into the film industry.

  5. Apr 9, 2005 · The director Yoshitaro Nomura, whose 1974 suspense thriller ''Castle of Sand'' has been ranked by critics as one of Japan's best films, died here on Friday. He was 85. The cause was pneumonia, his ...

  6. Mar 18, 2014 · However, decades after his most seminal contributions to Japanese cinema, Nomura is receiving his first ever international retrospective at this year’s Bradford International Film Festival. Considered to be a pioneer of Japanese film noir, Yoshitarô Nomura may very well be one of Japanese cinema’s best kept secrets. Including over 80 films ...

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  8. Apr 8, 2005 · Producer. Yoshitarō Nomura was a prolific Japanese film director, film producer, and screenwriter. His first accredited film, Pigeon, was released in 1953; his last, Kikenna Onna-tachi, in 1985. He has received several awards during his career, including the Japanese Academy Award for "Best Director" for his 1978 film The Demon.