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Masayuki Suo (周防 正行, Suo Masayuki, born October 29, 1956) is a Japanese film director. He is best known for his two Japan Academy Prize-winning films, 1992's Sumo Do, Sumo Don't and 1996's Shall We Dance?.
Masayuki Suô was born on 29 October 1956 in Tokyo, Japan. He is a director and writer, known for Shall We Dance? (1996), Sumo Do, Sumo Don't (1992) and I Just Didn't Do It (2006).
- January 1, 1
- 1.73 m
- Tokyo, Japan
- Masayuki Suô
We speak with Masayuki Suo about Japanese silent films and the concept of benshi, what was the meaning of film as a concept in the silent and the talkies era, recreating the Japan of a hundred years ago, and many other topics.
Suo Masayuki, Japanese director and screenwriter whose best-known movies address subjects largely unfamiliar to mainstream Japanese audiences. His notable films include Sumo Do, Sumo Don’t (1992), Shall We Dance? (1996), and I Just Didn’t Do it (2006). Learn more about Suo’s life and work.
Jul 11, 1997 · Shall We Dance?: Directed by Masayuki Suô. With Koji Yakusho, Tamiyo Kusakari, Naoto Takenaka, Eri Watanabe. A successful but unhappy Japanese accountant finds the missing passion in his life when he begins to secretly take ballroom dance lessons.
- (12K)
- Comedy, Drama, Music
- Masayuki Suô
- 1997-07-11
Jul 11, 1997 · “Shall We Dance?“, written and directed by Masayuki Suo, is the story of a Japanese every(business)man (Koji Yakusho of “Tampopo” and recent Palme
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But like the late Itami Juzo (who Suo documented on the sets of A Taxing Woman and its sequel), Suo uses “low” comedy to proffer a subversive critique of Japanese society’s conformist façade, whether it’s giving us gaseous monks who frequent strip clubs and horde sweets in their spartan quarters, or a sumo championship bout hinged on a ...