Keizoku
Keizoku ("Unsolved cases") is a Japanese mystery thriller created first as a TV drama and later as a film. It is about Detective Jun Shibata, who handles unsolved cases with her hardened partner Tōru Mayama.
The television series was broadcast in eleven episodes between 8 January and 19 March 1999.[1] A two-hour "special drama" was then broadcast on 24 December 1999.[1] The series has been called "epoch-making" in the police procedural genre on Japanese television.[2]
Television
Cast
- Miki Nakatani - Shibata Jun
- Atsuro Watabe - Mayama Tôru
- Sarina Suzuki - Kido Aya
- Yuu Tokui - Kondo Akio
- Hidekazu Nagae - Taniguchi Tsuyoshi
- Kenichi Yajima - Hayashida Seiichi
- Masashi Arifuku - Nagao Noboru
- Mari Nishio - Osawa Maiko
- Goro Noguchi - Saotome Jin
- Raita Ryu - Nonomura Koutarou
- Shigeru Izumiya -Tsubosaka Kunio
Episode Titles
- 01: Phone Call from the Dead Man
- 02: Punishment Table of Ice
- 03: The Wiretapped Murderer
- 04: The Room of Certain Death
- 05: The Man Who Saw the Future
- 06: The Wickedest Bombing-Demon
- 07: Death Curse of the Oil Painting
- 08: Farewell, Lovely Cutthroat
- 09: Future Revenge of the Past
- 10: Your Own Two Eyes
- 11: The Kiss of Death's Flavor
Production
- Screenwriter: Nishiogi Yumie
- Producer: Ueda Hiroki
- Directors: Tsutsumi Yukihiko, Kaneko Fuminori, Imai Natsuki, Isano Hideki
- Music: Mitake Akira
Film (2000)
Cast
- Shibata Jun: Nakatani Miki
- Mayama Tôru: Watabe Atsuro
- Hideyo Amamoto
- Inuko Inuyama
- David Itô
- Izumi Pinko
- Kunio Tsubosaka: Shigeru Izumiya
- Hairi Katagiri
- Kera
- Koyuki
- Katsuyuki Murai
- Katsuhisa Namase
- Nanako Ookôchi: Nanako Ôkôchi
- Kôtarô Nonomura: Raita Ryu
- Toshiya Sakai
- Aya Kido Sarina Suzuki
- Tomorowo Taguchi
- Masahiro Takaki
- Akio Kondô Yu Tokui
- Kenichi Yajima
Production
- Director: Yukihiko Tsutsumi
- Music: Akira Mitake
- Cinematography: Satoru Karasawa
- Editing: Soichi Ueno
- Visual effects supervisor: Fumihiko Sori
- Visual effects(Renderman): Bernard Edlington
References
- 1 2 "Keizoku". TV Drama Database. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
- ↑ Tanaka, Takanobu (8 October 2012). "「ケイゾク」…新時代開いた刑事もの". Yomiuri Shinbun. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
External links
- Keizoku/eiga at the Internet Movie Database
- Keizoku English page at the Wayback Machine (archived October 27, 2009)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.