Yahoo Web Search

  1. Tomoyuki Tanaka

    Tomoyuki Tanaka

    Japanese film producer

Search results

  1. Born. April 26, 1910. Kashiwara, Osaka, Japan. Died. April 2, 1997 (86) One of the top two producers at Toho during Japan’s Golden Age of Filmmaking (alongside Sanezumi Fujimoto), and the man responsible for fostering the birth of the innovative, popular, and lucrative kaiju eiga film genre.

  2. Apr 3, 1997 · Tomoyuki Tanaka, 86, the father of the Godzilla monster movie series, died of a stroke April 2 in Tokyo, 16 months after his giant lizard-like creation was killed off in the final Japanese...

  3. Producer: Kagemusha. Tomoyuki Tanaka was born on April 26, 1910 in Kashiwara, Osaka, Japan. He graduated from Kansai University in 1940 and joined Toho Studios the same year. After four years with the company, he became a producer, with his first film production being Kita no san-nin (1945).

    • April 26, 1910
    • April 2, 1997
  4. Jan 26, 2024 · The original "Gojira" was produced by Tomoyuki Tanaka, and written by Honda and his co-screenwriter Takeo Murata. Sadly, it's a little unclear as to which of these people initially had the idea...

    • Witney Seibold
    • Overview
    • Career

    Soon after graduating from Kansai University in 1940, Tanaka joined Taisho Studios which merged with Toho Studios in 1941. After four years with the company, he began producing his own films, and his first effort, Three Women of the North, was released in 1945.In his 60-year career with Toho, Tanaka produced more than 200 films.

    He is best known as the creator, with storyteller Shigeru Kayama, director Ishirō Honda, writer Takeo Murata and special-effects wizard Eiji Tsuburaya, of Godzilla, the towering embodiment of post-World War II anxiety. Tanaka created Godzilla in 1954 in an effort to illustrate the terror Japanese felt after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In an interview in 1985, Tanaka summed up the symbolism of Godzilla:

    In those days, Japanese had a real horror of radiation, and that horror is what made Godzilla so huge. From the beginning he has symbolized nature's revenge on mankind.

    The classic 1954 film Godzilla (1954; released in the U.S. in 1956 as Godzilla, King of the Monsters!) would spawn a series of sequels, adding up to 28 films by 2004. Tanaka produced every Toho monster movie up to his death in 1997. He often worked with the other three members of the Godzilla team: Honda, Tsuburaya, and composer Akira Ifukube, to complete such works as The Mysterians (1957) and Matango (1963). Tanaka produced six films directed by the acclaimed Akira Kurosawa. Their film Kagemusha (1980) was nominated for a Best Foreign Film Oscar and took the Palme d'Or at Cannes.

    One of the top two producers at Toho during Japan’s Golden Age of Filmmaking (alongside Sanezumi Fujimoto), and the man responsible for fostering the birth of the innovative, popular, and lucrative kaiju eiga film genre. Indeed, several films he produced during the 60s had extra scenes of giant monsters forcibly inserted to “enhance” their marketability. He is also known for producing several of Akira Kurosawa’s works, and played an instrumental part in the founding of Mifune Productions. In general Tanaka’s films were categorized as “man” movies, or films that appealed to male audiences, whereas Fujimoto’s films targeted the female demographic.

    Tanaka’s most famous production was, of course, the original Godzilla movie in 1954. He had received the greenlight and the resources to move ahead with a Japanese-Indonesian co-production, but the Indonesian government, still harboring bitter sentiment from World War II, barred the Japanese from entering the country. On the plane ride back home, Tanaka struck upon the idea of a film about a sea monster, and approached Toho president Iwao Mori, who approved the new direction. Tanaka pulled together the creative team of director Ishiro Honda, special effects wizard Eiji Tsuburaya, and composer Akira Ifukube, to bring his idea to fruition.

    Tanaka took great pride in his work, and was very protective of the Godzilla series in particular. He was hospitalized during the production of Yoshimitsu Banno’s controversial Godzilla vs. Hedorah (1971), and after viewing the finished product he barred Banno from ever directing another kaiju film under his watch. (Many years later, Banno would serve as a co-producer for Gareth Edwards’ 2014 reboot of Godzilla.)

    Tanaka would continue to produce kaiju films well into the 1990s, gradually relinquishing producer duties to his apprentice Shogo Tomiyama. In all Tanaka produced 22 Godzilla films, including every film in the original Showa and Heisei series. Tanaka provided the original screenplay treatments for the first two films in the Rebirth of Mothra trilogy; after his death in 1997, his image was used in Rebirth of Mothra 3 (1998). Tanaka received a dedication in the end credits of Roland Emmerich’s [much reviled] American Godzilla (1998).

  5. Apr 6, 1997 · Tomoyuki Tanaka, a prolific movie producer who shaped Japan's post-Hiroshima nightmare into a fearsome giant lizard that the world came to know as Godzilla, died on Wednesday.

  6. People also ask

  7. Jun 8, 2023 · Tomoyuki Tanaka, a film producer with a vast catalog of films to his credit, most famously Godzilla, was looking for a new project when his initial film was cancelled. Given the popularity of movies like King Kong, Tanaka thought – one day while flying over the Mars – what would happen if an amphibious monster emerged from nowhere.

  1. People also search for