Zigeunerweisen

Zigeunerweisen (2017)Cast and Crew

Movie

Crew

N
Nobutake Kamiya
Editor
K
Kazue Nagatsuka
Director of Photography
J
Junichi Fujisawa
Assistant Camera
Y
Yoichi Shiga
Assistant Camera
O
Osamu Fujiishi
Assistant Camera
Y
Yozo Tanaka
Screenplay
H
Hyakken Uchida
Novel
T
Takayoshi Watanabe
Assistant Director
A
Akiyoshi Kanda
Set Decoration
M
Mitsuo Onishi
Gaffer
K
Katsumi Itou
Sound Effects
K
Kaname Kawachi
Music
T
Takeshi Otsuka
Lighting Technician
T
Tomoo Oda
Executive In Charge Of Production
K
Kenji Itô
Producer
Y
Yoshito Tada
Art Direction
G
Genji Fukushima
Costume Design
Y
Yoshinobu Matsukawa
Costume Design
S
Sumie Maruyama
Hairstylist
A
Akemi Miyazaki
Makeup Artist
R
Reiko Ôniwa
Makeup Artist
M
Masayuki Hiramatsu
Production Supervisor
Y
Yoshiyuki Hiranuma
Production Supervisor
Y
Yoshitomo Hanada
Assistant Director
N
Naoto Sakai
Assistant Director
S
Sumio Yamada
First Assistant Director
Y
Yutaka Koma
Assistant Art Director
S
Shigeo Kozakura
Assistant Art Director
M
Makoto Miyashita
Props
T
Takehiko Nakajima
Props
T
Tooru Takahashi
Assistant Art Director
K
Koichi Iwata
Sound
K
Kôji Murata
Sound Mixer
A
Akinobu Sugino
Lighting Technician
Y
Yutaka Suzuki
Lighting Technician
K
Kuninori Usami
Lighting Technician
M
Masato Ide
Assistant Editor
T
Takayuki Matsumoto
Negative Cutter
A
Akira Ishikawa
Musician
A
Ayako Uchida
Script Supervisor

The Taisho Trilogy

After over a decade in the wilderness following his firing from Nikkatsu for Branded to Kill (1967), maverick director Seijun Suzuki returned with a vengeance with his critically-praised tryptic of cryptic supernatural dramas set during the liberal enlightenment of Japan’s Taisho Era (1912-26). Rarely seen outside of Japan, the films in the Taisho Trilogy are considered Suzuki’s masterpieces in his homeland. Presenting a dramatic turn from more his familiar tales of cops, gangsters and unruly youth, these surrealistic psychological puzzles drip with a lush exoticism, distinctively capturing the pandemonium of a bygone age of decadence and excess, when Western ideas, fashions, technologies and art fused into everyday aspect of Japanese life.