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#koji uehara
barbiecarlo · 1 year
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Vintage Papi & Koji.
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In keeping with Ososan tradition, I spotted the cameos in Takoyaki
Uchikawa
Sukkeroku
Totoko's Mom
Homura??? (I'm not too sure)
Delinquent from the summer ep!
Atsushi (I thought he was a matsu for a second)
Iwase
Shaolin
Hatabou's Butler
Kinko
Chrismas Couple
Food Fighter
Sono (Eating Queen 1)
College Girl from 2.5
Aida
Master from Final Sheeh
Michealmatsu
Sachiko
Producer guy from Iyami is troubled
Jyushi's partner from Nagomi detective
Shoei
Heckler from Totoko's Panic... I think??
Old Flag Butler
Sanematsu
Miwa
Norimoto
Kumi
Announcers from S2EP20
Oil Magnate
Yanagida
Satozaki
Dobusu
Judy and Aosaka (Eating Queens)
Oyama
Koji Murakami
Flag Secretary
Baseball kid's dad
Eitarou's Mom
French President
Summer delinquent 2
I think the mustache dude is also from Final Sheeh
Uehara
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narichan777 · 1 year
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続いて「Orange girl friend」を観ま~すヽ(^。^)ノ
Koji Uehara監督の舞台挨拶があります⸜( ˆ࿀ˆ )⸝♡
#宇佐卓真 #中心愛 #佐々木ありさ #早川渚紗 #あだち理絵子 #木内義一 #福田航也 #朝木茉奈 #悠維 #佐々木瞳 #KojiUehara #Orangegirlfriend #シネマスコーレ
https://www.orangegirlfriend.com/
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titosuzu · 2 years
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第6回 #岩槻映画祭 4年ぶりの開催ということで 今回も短編13本Aプログラム Koji Uehara監督「Orenge girl friend』朝乃アメ監督『逢いたくて』堀井彩監督『親家方騒動記』 Bプログラム 渋谷悠監督『いたずらのパレード』目黒啓太監督『パパのスマホ』友利翼監督『レンブとゆりかご』Cプログラム 田中晴菜監督『ぬけがら』名村辰監督『誰のための日』大門 嵩、祁答院 雄貴監督『徒然甘々』胡海みどり監督『橋の下で』 Dプログラム カツヲ監督『卵守』木内一裕監督『明日の献立』松本動監督『初色』 そしてななめ45°さんのコントにTKda黒ぶちさんのラップ。楽しめました! ありがとうございました! https://www.instagram.com/p/CedwTNbJlOA/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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c2-cinemaconnection · 2 years
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エーガね!REPORT▶︎映画『虹が落ちる前に』6/5(日)、シネマスコーレで行われた舞台挨拶を取材!Koji Uehara監督、守山龍之介さん、梶田冬磨さん、昆竜弥さん、武井玲奈さん、畦田ひとみさん登壇! #虹が落ちる前に #シネマスコーレ https://www.instagram.com/p/CebAQ_zP400/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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xoxostephanie11 · 6 years
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24sene · 5 years
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Xfinity Report: Koji Uehera Calls It A Career After Two Decades
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sekcs-zoo · 7 years
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CUBS WIN! Koji closed out the game. GO CUBS!
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bryzzo · 7 years
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ot9000 · 7 years
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上原浩治 岩手県
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margridarnauds · 3 years
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Promotional video for Toho Stage’s 2021 production of Marie Antoinette (マリー・アントワネット), playing Jan. 28-Feb. 21, 2021. 
Cast (New additions for the 2021 run bolded): 
Sonim (ソニン) /Natsumi Kon (昆 夏美) - Margrid Arnaud
Rena Sasamoto (笹本玲奈)/Hanafusa Mari (花總まり)- Marie Antoinette
Mario Tashiro (田代万里生) /Shouma Kai (甲斐翔真) - Axel Von Fersen 
Rio Uehara (上原理生) /Ryunosuke Onoda (小野田龍之介) - The Duc d’Orléans/Philippe Égalité 
Yuichi Harada (原田優一) - Louis XVI
Hajime Komada (駒田 一) - Leonard
Mao Ayabuki (彩吹真央) - Rose Bertin
Kanami Ayano - The Princesse de Lamballe
Ryuji Kamiyama (上山竜治) /Tatsuya Kawaguchi (川口竜也 ) - Jacques Hébert
Noboru Nakayama (中山 昇) - The Archbishop de Rohan
Katsuyuki Nakanishi (中西勝之) - Boehmer
Asakuma Rinro (朝隈濯朗) - Dr. Guillotin 
Koji Aoyama (青山航士) - Robespierre
Shinichiro Hara (原 慎一郎) - Danton
Atsuko Iezuka (家塚敦子) - Madame de la Motte
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barbiecarlo · 1 year
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Band of Bearded Brothers.
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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The Cinematic Legacy of Lupin: Arsène Lupin’s Live-Action Filmography
https://ift.tt/2ToNPSY
When Netflix premiered the first season of Lupin last January, 70 million sheltered-in-place households ravenously binged it, making the series the most-watched non-English show for its premiere month on the streamer so far. Lupin steals a page from French literature. The hero of Lupin, Assane Diop (Omar Sy) is inspired by France’s iconic ‘Gentleman Thief’ Arsène Lupin, a fictional figure created by French writer Maurice Leblanc in 1905. 
Lupin was the subject of some two dozen books by Leblanc, who continued adding into his literary franchise until well into the 1930s. Akin to Robin Hood, Lupin stole from the rich, and often did good deeds despite his thieving capers. He was a master of deception and disguise, a lady killer who always operated with a classy panache. With a legacy spanning more than a century, there have been plenty of live-action depictions in film and TV.
The First Lupin Films are Over a Hundred Years Old
The earliest cinematic portrayals of Lupin were in black and white, and many have been lost. One of the very first was a U.S. production, a short film titled The Gentleman Burglar in 1908. William Ranows, a veteran of over sixty films, played Lupin. It was directed by one of the first film directors ever, Edwin Porter, who worked for Edison. 
Leblanc was a contemporary of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes. Consequently, Holmes appears in a few Lupin stories. Doyle took legal action against Leblanc, forcing the name change in Lupin stories to the thinly disguised ‘Herlock Sholmes.’ As Holmes is loved by the British, Lupin is cherished by the French, and both characters became global icons. Consequently, among the many film and TV adaptations, several that depicted their rivalry regardless of copyright issues. In 1910, a German film serial titled Arsène Lupin contra Sherlock Holmes starred Paul Otto as Lupin and Viggo Larsen as Holmes (Larsen also served as director.) There were allegedly five installments in the series, but they’ve all been lost. 
France produced Arsène Lupin contre Ganimard in 1914 with Georges Tréville as Lupin (Inspector Ganimard was constantly on Lupin’s trail). The silent film Arsène Lupin came out of Britain in 1916 with Gerald Ames in the titular role, followed by more U.S. productions: Arsène Lupin (1917) starring Earle Williams, The Teeth of the Tiger (1919) with David Powell, which is also lost, and 813 starring Wedgwood Nowell. 813 was the title of Leblanc’s fourth Lupin book. 
Lupin and the Barrymore Clan of Actors
The legendary thespian John Barrymore played Lupin in 1932’s Arsène Lupin. He took on the role under one of Lupin’s aliases, the Duke of Charmerace. His brother, Lionel Barrymore, played another Lupin nemesis, Detective Guerchard. Given the illustrious cast, this is a standout Lupin film, although there isn’t a shred of Frenchness in Barrymore’s interpretation. Coincidentally, John Barrymore also played Holmes in Sherlock Holmes a decade earlier. He is also the grandfather of Drew Barrymore. 
Barrymore’s Arsène Lupin revolved around the theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre. Historically, the Da Vinci masterpiece was stolen in 1911 and recovered in 1913. This inspired a Lupin short story, a parody akin to early fanfiction that was not written by Leblanc. In 1912, mystery writer Carolyn Wells published The Adventure Of The Mona Lisa which imagined Holmes and Lupin to be part of the International Society of Infallible Detectives alongside A. J. Raffles, Monsieur Lecoq, and other crime-solving luminaries. Barrymore’s Arsène Lupin does not retell this tale, but the theft of the Mona Lisa comes up again in other Lupin films because it’s France so robbing the Louvre is a common plot point. Netflix’s Lupin begins with Diop’s heist of the Queen’s necklace from the Louvre, an Easter egg referring to Leblanc’s original Lupin short story, ‘The Queen’s Necklace’ published in 1906.
The ‘30s delivered two more Lupin films. The French-made Arsène Lupin detective (1937) starred Jules Berry as Lupin and the American-made Arsène Lupin Returns (1938) with Melvyn Douglas who was credited under another Lupin alias Rene Farrand (Lupin has a lot of aliases). Despite being a completely different production, Douglas’ film was an attempt to capitalize on the success of Barrymore’s film as both films were from MGM. Universal Studios entered the fray soon after with their version Enter Arsène Lupin (1944) starring Charles Korvin. The following year, the Mexican-made Arsenio Lupin (1945) featured Ramón Pereda as the French thief. That film also starred José Baviera as Sherlock. 
The Early Japanese Lupin Adaptations
Lupin captured the hearts of the Japanese. Ironically, Japanese speakers have a difficult time pronouncing ‘L’s so Lupin is usually renamed as ‘Rupan’ or ‘Wolf’ (Lupine means wolf-like – remember Remus Lupin from Harry Potter). As early as 1923, Japan also delivered a silent version of 813, retitled Hachi Ichi San, starring Komei Minami as the renamed Lupin character of Akira Naruse. 
In the ‘50s, Japan produced 3 films that credit Leblanc: Nanatsu-no Houseki (1950) with Keiji Sada, Tora no-Kiba (1951) with Ken Uehara, and Kao-no Nai Otoko (1955) with Eiji Okada. However, post-WWII Japan has obscured most of the details on these films. Like Hachi Ichi San, these Japanese versions laid the foundations for the Lupin III, which debuted as a manga in 1967 and spawned a major manga and anime franchise. In karmic retribution for Leblanc poaching Sherlock, Japan stole Lupin. Lupin III was Arsène Lupin’s grandson. 
Notably, the second Lupin III feature film, The Castle of Cagliostro, marked the directorial debut of famed animator Hayao Miyazaki and is considered a groundbreaking classic that inspired Pixar and Disney (Disney’s The Great Mouse Detective (1986) pilfered the finale clockwork fight from The Castle of Cagliostro). In the wake of the anime Lupin III Part I (1971), Japan produced some anime films that were more loyal to Leblanc, notably Kaitō Lupin: 813 no Nazo (1979) and Lupin tai Holmes (1981). However, this article is focused upon live-action adaptations. Lupin III is another topic entirely. 
In the late ‘50s and into the ‘70s, France reclaimed her celebrated son. Robert Lamoureux became Lupin for two films, Les aventures d’Arsène Lupin (1957) and Signé Arsène Lupin (1959). A comedy version pitted rival sons of Lupin against each other in Arsène Lupin contre Arsène Lupin (1962). Playing the Lupin brothers were Jean-Pierre Cassel and Jean-Claude Brialy. 
Lupin on the Small Screen
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TV
From Lupin III to Inspector Gadget: Examining the Heirs of Arsène Lupin
By Natalie Zutter
France also delivered several TV series. Arsène Lupin ran from 1971 to 1974 and starred Georges Descrières. It encompassed 26 60-minute episodes. L’Île aux trente cercueils (1979) is often included in Lupin filmographies because it is based on a Leblanc novel published in 1919 in which Lupin makes a guest appearance. However, he was omitted from this six-episode miniseries, so it doesn’t quite count. Arsène Lupin joue et perd (1980) was another six-episode miniseries loosely based on ‘813’ with Jean-Claude Brialy from the 1962 comedy. 
One more French TV show, Le Retour d’Arsène Lupin, was televised in two seasons, 1989-1990 and 1995-1996. These were 90-minute episodes with 12 in season 1 and eight in season 2. François Dunoyer starred as Lupin.
And in 2007, the largest Lupin TV show ran for a whopping 96 episodes plus one special. Lupin was made in the Philippines no less, starring Richard Gutierrez as André Lupin
Lupin in the Last Decade 
In 2011, Japan delivered one more live-action film Lupin no Kiganjo starring Kōichi Yamadera. Based on Leblanc’s 3rd Lupin book, L’aiguille Creuse, the film is reset in modern Japan.
In the strangest permutation of Japanese Lupins, Daughter of Lupin was a TV series that is an odd hybrid of Lupin III and Leblanc’s work. A campy sitcom in the tradition of Romeo and Juliet, Hana (Kyoko Fukada) comes from a family of thieves known as the L clan who are inspired by Lupin. Her lover, Kazuma (Koji Seto), is from a family of cops. When in thief mode, Hana wears a carnival mask and a velvet catsuit. It’s goofy, sort of a live action version of anime. It ran for two seasons in 2019 and 2020.
The Lupin Adaptation You Should See 
The strongest modern adaptation of Leblanc’s iconic burglar is the period film Arsène Lupin (2004). It’s an actioner, a creation story for Lupin, starting from his childhood and moving rapidly to him becoming a master gentleman thief. Romain Duris plays the titular role, and the film is in French. Backing Duris are veteran actresses Kristin Scott Thomas as Comtesse de Cagliostro and Eva Green as Clarisse de Dreux-Soubise. The story is absurd, like a mash-up between a superhero film and the DaVinci code, and it gets a bit muddled in the telling. However, it’s shot on location (including the Louvre) and encapsulates the spirit of Leblanc’s character in an updated fashion. It’s a perfect primer for Lupin Season 2.
cnx.cmd.push(function() { cnx({ playerId: "106e33c0-3911-473c-b599-b1426db57530", }).render("0270c398a82f44f49c23c16122516796"); });
Lupin seasons 1 and 2 are available to stream on Netflix now.
The post The Cinematic Legacy of Lupin: Arsène Lupin’s Live-Action Filmography appeared first on Den of Geek.
from Den of Geek https://ift.tt/2U0px1N
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loverintranslations · 4 years
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『Usami Shingo♡Baseball is back!♡World Sports×MLB♪*゚』Makino Maria (2020-7-23)
✨Morning Musume。'20 68th Single
『KOKORO&KARADA/LOVEPedia/Ningen Kankei No way way』Release Commemoration <Cheki・Sign・Individual Handshake Event>✨
2020/7/23 (Thu) 💗
Really thank you very much😊
I was happy 💗
Maria was super happy 💗
Really thank you very much for today 💗 💗 💗
   ✨Nana→Kyuu✨
Cultural Broadcasting-san⚾ Mon~Fri 7:00~9:00
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7/23 (Thu)
Makino Maria 🐰 was able to appear💕💕
Really thank you very much 💗
 Ueda Marie-san 💗
Because I could meet my beloved Marie-san、Maria was super happy 💗
I was really looking forward to it😊
I had lots of things I wanted to talk to Marie-san about💕 I could only talk with her a little though・・・。I hope Marie-san learned lots about MLB from me💕💕
I hope I can meet her again😊
 Okada Keisuke-san⚾
Okada-san’s 「Wao!!」 is the bestー‼️‼️
Okada-san was happy😆
Okada-san⭐ Thank you for enjoying my story✨
Maria had lots of fun 😆💗
Let’s compete‼️‼️
 ✨Ueda Marie-san's TikTok✨
⚾Uehara Koji's Talk⚾
Maria watched it 🐰💕💕💕
 Cultural Broadcasting-san『Nana→Kyuu』-san🧡
Thank you very much for calling me in as a guest 🐰⚾
I worked really hard all day‼️‼️ Today
From Morning Musume。'20   Makino Maria
 [Baseball content has been omitted]
 Take a look at MariSta 🐰 Makino Maria's Instagram
                           🍀 Makino Maria 🍀
Original - https://ameblo.jp/mm-12ki/entry-12612928599.html
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kinguehara · 5 years
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Monster Hunter High (2010)
Starring Derek Uehara as freshman Koji Evans, MHH was a children’s sitcom about highschoolers training to fight monsters such as vampires, werewolves, and ogres. The show ended in 2015, with a lackluster 5th season after most of the original cast ‘graduated’ in the 4th season. In actuality, most of the child stars employed on set turned 18 before filming the 5th season, and MHH could not afford their new salaries. 
"Do you think you'll miss it?"
Derek smiled as Avery joined him on the high wall that overlooked the rest of the MHH set. He was never going to stop loving the sight of Avery being out of his chair. Derek loved his brother no matter what, but seeing him healthy enough to get up and walk around on his own, even if only for a few minutes? Derek was pretty sure that could get him through almost anything.
"A little," Derek admitted. "But I think it's time for me to go, anyway. They never should have asked for a fifth season."
Avery nodded, the wisdom on his face far beyond his sixteen years. A few moments passed, Derek beginning to fall back into nostalgia before Avery asked: "So, uh. When are you going to tell mom and dad you're not retiring?"
Derek chewed on his bottom lip nervously at the obvious judgement in his brother's voice. The Uehara family didn't do secrets, not even small teenager ones like sneaking beers and lying about homework. Derek had never seen the need to take risks like that, and his parents had felt too guilty to ever keep anything from him-- Avery had never had the luxury of enough privacy to do anything worth keeping to himself.
But the decision to keep acting was a big one. Derek was lucky, he knew, to have made it through the first contract unscathed. Most of the people he had worked with before MHH didn't. TV wasn't a kind business to its contracts. They weren't like movie actors, who could do several projects in a row and hope one stuck. No, you could do as many pilots as you wanted, but it wasn't unheard of for new shows to get cancelled one or two episodes into the their first season.
Derek had made it through, gotten extremely lucky, and now he was going to do it all again. He couldn't even pretend it was for Avery this time, because they had more than enough saved. Unlike a lot of the other kids, his parents had never tried to live beyond their means-- Derek had more than enough cash to take care of all of them until they could get back on their feet, even put himself through college if he wanted. But...
He loved acting. Even as stupid and dangerous as it was, Derek couldn't think of a single thing he'd rather be doing with his life. Sure, he could always take over the dojo. Martial arts would always be part of his life, but that didn't even touch the thrill of puzzling out a character, finally unlocking the part of himself that could breathe life into fiction. Derek loved it, and he was good at it, and he didn't have the heart to say goodbye just yet.
"I'm afraid they're going to think I'm crazy."
Avery shrugged. "I mean, they probably will, because it is crazy." Derek frowned down at the concrete several feet below them. Avery continued, "The way I see it, though, you're 18 and you've been carrying the rest of us on your back for like seven years now. I think you're due for a little craziness. Most teenagers are."
"It just feels selfish," Derek confessed. "Like, I'm willing to die to act, but maybe I should be thinking about whether or not I'm willing to leave you alone, or- or put Mom and Dad through that kind of--"
Avery threw an arm around Derek's neck. "Between you and me, bro, I'd like you a lot more if you learned to be a little more selfish."
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xoxostephanie11 · 6 years
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