[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to content

Shōzō Makino (director)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shōzō Makino
BornSeptember 22, 1878
Kyoto, Japan
DiedJuly 25, 1929
Occupations
  • Film director
  • film producer
  • businessman
Children5, including Sadatsugu Matsuda and Masahiro Makino
RelativesHiroyuki Nagato (grandson)
Masahiko Tsugawa (grandson)
Kunitaro Sawamura (son-in-law)
Anna Makino (great-granddaughter)
Shōzō Makino in 1920s

Shōzō Makino (牧野省三, Makino Shōzō, September 22, 1878, Kyoto – July 25, 1929) was a Japanese film director, film producer and businessman who is regarded as a pioneering director of Japanese film.[citation needed] In addition, all four of his sons, including Masahiro Makino and Sadatsugu Matsuda, went into the film business as either directors or producers, and his grandchildren include the actors Masahiko Tsugawa and Hiroyuki Nagato. Actress Yoko Minamida is a granddaughter-in-law.

Career

[edit]

Makino was born in Kyoto on September 22, 1878. His mother ran a theater[clarification needed], and his association with movies began when the motion picture producer Einosuke Yokota [jp] of Yokota Shōkai asked for his help in filming period films. Shozo discovered actor Matsunosuke Onoe working in an itinerant kabuki troupe and enlisted him into becoming Japan's first film star. He directed over 60 Matsunosuke films a year in the early 1910s, most if not all short films.

In addition to creating the unique genre of the Japanese period film,[clarification needed] Makino also incorporated trick camera techniques and a myriad of other cinematic methods of expression into his films.[citation needed] In 1919, he founded the Mikado Company and began to produce educational films. He later founded an independent production company, Makino Film Productions, and from 1923, continued as a director and as producer. Makino Film Productions turned out many successful movies also made by several other directors and actors.[citation needed][clarification needed]

In 1928, he directed the epic, Jitsuroku Chushingura (True Record of the Forty-Seven Ronin), which coincided with his 50th birthday. He died on July 25, 1929.

Family

[edit]

He had a total of five children. Two of his sons, Sadatsugu Matsuda (1906–2003) and Masahiro Makino (1908–1993) were also film directors. Another, Mitsuo Makino, was a film producer, and another Shinzō Makino, also worked as a director (his wife was the actress Chikako Miyagi). Masahiro married the actress Yukiko Todoroki and their son, Masayuki Makino, is the head of the Okinawa Actor's School. Shōzō's daughter, Tomoko Makino, married the actor Kunitarō Sawamura, and is the mother to actors Masahiko Tsugawa and Hiroyuki Nagato, both of whom married famous actresses, Yukiji Asaoka and Yōko Minamida respectively. Kunitarō's brother and sister are the actors Daisuke Katō and Sadako Sawamura.

Filmography

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]