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  1. Hiroshi Inagaki

    Hiroshi Inagaki

    Director, screenwriter, producer, actor

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  1. Hiroshi Inagaki (Japanese: 稲垣 浩, Hepburn: Inagaki Hiroshi, 30 December 1905 – 1 May 1980) was a Japanese filmmaker who worked on over 100 films in a career spanning over five decades.

  2. Hiroshi Inagaki. Director: Wasurerareta kora. Inagaki's career in film began as an actor--a child actor, in fact, appearing in numerous silent films beginning at the very dawn of Japanese cinema. This is probably why he was promoted to director at the unusually (for Japan) young age of 22.

    • Director, Writer, Actor
    • December 30, 1905
    • Hiroshi Inagaki
    • May 21, 1980
  3. The Samurai Trilogy is a film trilogy directed by Hiroshi Inagaki and starring Toshiro Mifune as Musashi Miyamoto and Kōji Tsuruta as Kojirō Sasaki. The films are based on Musashi, a novel by Eiji Yoshikawa about the famous duelist and author of The Book of Five Rings .

  4. Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto: Directed by Hiroshi Inagaki. With Toshirô Mifune, Rentarô Mikuni, Kurôemon Onoe, Kaoru Yachigusa. Depicts the early life of the legendary warrior Musashi Miyamoto; his years as an aspiring warrior, an outlaw and finally a true samurai.

    • (9.5K)
    • Action, Adventure, Biography
    • Hiroshi Inagaki
    • 1955-11-18
  5. Oct 5, 2016 · Angry and disenchanted with life in Miyamoto village, Musashi (then known only as Takezo, his childhood name) dreams of being a warrior. As he doesn’t have much in the way of family, he sets off to...

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  7. New cover by Yuko Shimizu. The Samurai Trilogy, directed by Hiroshi Inagaki and starring the inimitable Toshiro Mifune, was one of Japan’s most successful exports of the 1950s, a rousing, emotionally gripping tale of combat and self-discovery.

  8. Hiroshi Inagaki (稲垣 浩 Inagaki Hiroshi, 30 December 1905 – 21 May 1980) was a Japanese filmmaker most known for the Academy Award-winning Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto, which he directed in 1954. Born in Tokyo as the son of a shinpa actor, Inagaki appeared on stage in his childhood before joining the Nikkatsu studio as an actor in 1922.

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