Takashi Nomura
Takashi Nomura (野村孝) (February 18, 1927 – May 5, 2015) is a Japanese film director for studios including Nikkatsu.[1] The Criterion Collection described him as a "prominent, stylistically daring director".[1]
While on contract with Nikkatsu, Nomura directed films such as The Quick Draw Kid (1961).[2]
He is perhaps best known for A Colt Is My Passport (1967), influenced by French New Wave filmmakers such as Jean-Pierre Melville, and by Sergio Leone-style Westerns.[3][4] Nomura's use of still shots in the opening sequence has been compared to manga art techniques.[5]
Film
- Women Smell of Night
- Gyakuen Mitsusakazuki
- Blood Vendetta (1971).[6]
- Takahashi Hideki's Captain Series 10 - Murderous Intent in the Pacific (1998)
gollark: Unfortunately, I only play 22.7% of 10.3% of 0.4% of the time.
gollark: Can you try the GTech™ gravitic facility?
gollark: Troubling. What happened to the GTech™ GPlanets™?
gollark: In theory I could make onstat but TCP, or onstat but Minecraft protocol.
gollark: Yes, I made you send it retroactively to save time.
References
- "Eclipse Series 17: Nikkatsu Noir". The Criterion Collection.
- Pettey, Homer B. (11 November 2014). "International Noir". Edinburgh University Press – via Google Books.
- Hardstaff, Matthew (2010). Berra, John (ed.). Japan. Intellect Books. p. 277. ISBN 978-1-84150-335-6.
- Yau, Esther (28 April 2017). "Hong Kong Neo-Noir". Edinburgh University Press – via Google Books.
- Lee, Laura (8 November 2017). "Japanese Cinema Between Frames". Springer – via Google Books.
- Palmer, Bill; Palmer, Karen; Meyers, Ric (1 January 1995). The Encyclopedia of Martial Arts Movies. Scarecrow Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-1-4616-7275-3.
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