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Japan Academy Film Prize

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japan Academy Film Prize
Current: 47th Japan Academy Film Prize
Trophy of the Japan Academy Prize
Awarded forExcellence in film making
CountryJapan
Presented byJapan Academy Film Prize Association
First awarded1978
Websitejapan-academy-prize.jp

The Japan Academy Film Prize (日本アカデミー賞, Nippon Akademii-shou), often called the Japan Academy Prize, the Japan Academy Awards, and the Japanese Academy Awards, is a series of awards given annually since 1978 by the Japan Academy Film Prize Association (日本アカデミー賞協会, Nippon Akademii-shou Kyoukai) for excellence in Japanese film. Award categories are similar to the Academy Awards.

Venue

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Grand Prince Hotel New Takanawa

Since 1998, the venue is regularly held at the Grand Prince Hotel New Takanawa of Prince Hotels in Takanawa, Minato-ku, Tokyo. Admission tickets for this award ceremony are also sold to regular customers.

As of 2015, there is a charge of 40,000 Yen which includes a French cuisine course dinner named after the award ceremony. Spectators are expected to attend in semi-formal attire. Elementary school students and younger are not permitted.[1]

Award

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The winners are selected from the recipients of the Award for Excellence.[2] The award statue of the winner measures 27 cm × 11 cm × 11 cm (10.7 in × 4.4 in × 4.4 in).[3] The recipients of the Award for Excellence receive a smaller statue.

Categories

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Award winners

[edit]
Time Year Category Award winners / winners Notes
1 1977
(Shōwa 52)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"The Yellow Handkerchief (1977 film)" (Yoji Yamada)
Yoji Yamada-"Yellow Handkerchief of Happiness", "Otoko wa Tsurai yo" series
Yoji Yamada / Yoshitaka Asama - "Otoko wa Tsurai yo" series, "The Yellow Handkerchief (1977 film)"
Ken Takakura - “The Yellow Handkerchief (1977 film)”, “Mount Hakkoda (1977 film)
Shima Iwashita - "Ballad of Orin"
Tetsuya Takeda -"The Yellow Handkerchief (1977 film)"
Kaori Momoi - "The Yellow Handkerchief (1977 film)"
2 1978
(Shōwa 53)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
The Incident (1978 film)” (Yoshitarō Nomura)
Yoshitaro Nomura - "The Incident (1978 film)", "The Demon (1978 film)"
Shinto Kaneto - The Incident (1978 film)
Ken Ogata - The Demon (1978 film)
Shinobu Otake - The Incident (1978 film)
Tsunehiko Watase - The Incident (1978 film)
Shinobu Otake - "The Incident (1978 film)", "Monument of priesthood" (聖職の碑)
The 40,000 yen party admission ticket, which was partially criticized for its high price in the first round, was greatly reduced to 8000 yen. However, after that, it returned to 40,000 yen again.
3 1979
(Shōwa 54)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Vengeance Is Mine (1979 film)” (Shohei Imamura)
Shohei Imamura - “Vengeance Is Mine (1979 film)”
Baba Masaru - "Vengeance Is Mine (1979 film)"
Tomisaburo Wakayama -"Impulse Murder Son" (衝動殺人 息子よ)
Kaori Momoi - "A baby given by God" (神様のくれた赤ん坊), “No More Easy Life
Bunta Sugawara - "Taiyō o Nusunda Otoko" (The Man who Stole the Sun)
Mayumi Ogawa -"Three letters not delivered" (配達されない三通の手紙), “Revenge is on me”
4 1980
(Shōwa 55)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Zigeunerweisen (film)” (Seijun Suzuki)
Seijun Suzuki - "Zigeunerweisen (film)"
Yoshitaka Asama, Yoji Yamada - "A Distant Cry from Spring", "Tora-san's Tropical Fever"
Ken Takakura - "Disturbance" (動乱), "A Distant Cry from Spring"
Chieko Baisho - "A Distant Cry from Spring", "Tora-san's Tropical Fever"
Tetsuro Tamba - "203 Highlands" (二百三高地)
Michiyo Ōkusu - “Zigeunerweisen (film)
Akira Kurosawa declined to receive the award of excellence for Kagemusha. The best work award was won by Zigeunerweisen (film), an independent production and distribution company.
5 1981
(Shōwa 56)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Station (1981 film)" (Yasuo Furuhata)
Kohei Oguri - "Muddy River (film)"
Sō Kuramoto - "Station (1981 film)"
Ken Takakura - "Station (1981 film)"
Keiko Matsuzaka - “Youth Gate” (青春の門), Tora-san's Love in Osaka
Katsuo Nakamura - “Kagero-za”, “Love Letter” (ラブレター (1981年の映画), "In-process Umeyasu" (仕掛人梅安), "Tin Medal" (ブリキの勲章)
Yuko Tanaka - “Edo Porn”, "Eijanaika (film)"
6 1982
(Shōwa 57)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Fall Guy" (Kinji Fukasaku)
Kinji Fukasaku -"Fall Guy", "Dotonbori River"
Kōhei Tsuka - "Fall Guy"
Mitsuru Hirata - "Fall Guy"
Keiko Matsuzaka - "Fall Guy", "Dotonbori River"
Morio Kazama - "Fall Guy"
Rumiko Koyanagi -"To Trap a Kidnapper"
7 1983
(Shōwa 58)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"The Ballad of Narayama (1983 film)" (Shohei Imamura)
Hideo Gosha -“The Geisha (1983 film)
Koji Takahashi - “The Geisha (1983 film)
Ken Ogata - “The Ballad of Narayama (1983 film)”, “The Geisha (1983 film)”, “The Catch (1983 film)
Rumiko Koyanagi - Hakujasho
Morio Kazama - "The Geisha (1983 film)", "Life Theater" (人生劇場)
Atsuko Asano -"The Geisha (1983 film)", "Dirty Hero" (汚れた英雄)
The phenomenon of The Geisha (1983 film), which monopolized the best award in 5 of the 6 individual awards (director, screenwriter, leading actor, supporting actor, supporting actress), was not nominated for an excellence award for some reason. The cause is unknown because the selection process was not announced.
8 1984
(Shōwa 59)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"The Funeral (1984 film)" (Juzo Itami)
Juzo Itami - "The Funeral (1984 film)"
Juzo Itami - "The Funeral (1984 film)"
Tsutomu Yamazaki - "The Funeral (1984 film)", "Farewell to the Ark"
Sayuri Yoshinaga - "Ohan (film)", "Station to Heaven"
Kaku Takashina - “Mahjong hōrōki
Kin Sugai - "The Funeral (1984 film)", "Hissatsu: Sure Death"
Independent production "The Funeral (1984 film)" (distribution: ATG Japan Art Theatre Guild) won the Best Film Award.
9 1985
(Shōwa 60)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Gray Sunset” (Toshiya Ito)
Shinichiro Sawai - "Early Spring Story", "W's Tragedy"
Hiro Matsuda (松田寛夫) - "Gray Sunset"
Minoru Chiaki - "Gray Sunset"
Mitsuko Baisho - "The flowers in my life are flowers until death” (生きているうちが花なのよ死んだらそれまでよ党宣言), “Love Letter (1985 film)”, "Friend, meditate quietly" (友よ、静かに瞑れ)
Kaoru Kobayashi - "Love Letter (1985 film)", "Sorekara"
Yoshiko Mita - "W's Tragedy", "Haru no Kane"
10 1986
(Shōwa 61)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
House on Fire (film)” (Kinji Fukasaku)
Kinji Fukasaku - “House on Fire (film)
Fumio Konami, Kinji Fukasaku - “House on Fire (film)
Ken Ogata - "House on Fire (film)"
Ayumi Ishida - “House on Fire (film)”, “Tokei – Adieu l'hiver
Hitoshi Ueki -"Congratulations" (祝辞), "New years of joy and sorrow" (新・喜びも悲しみも幾歳月)
Mieko Harada - “House on Fire (film)”, “Kokushi Musou” (国士無双), "Portrait of Prussian Blue" (プルシアンブルーの肖像)
Sea and Poison”, which had won numerous awards both in Japan and abroad, was expected to dominate the awards, but it was not even nominated. Instead, it received a Special Award. The result was thus unclear and this opaque result was widely covered in the media. The film critic Oguro Toyoshi, who is known for his acerbic tongue, severely criticized and condemned the existence of the Japan Academy Awards using a whole page of the movie magazine "Roadshow" "Ijiwaru Critic Enma Book".
11 1987
(Shōwa 62)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
A Taxing Woman” (Juzo Itami)
Juzo Itami - "A Taxing Woman"
Juzo Itami - "A Taxing Woman"
Tsutomu Yamazaki - "A Taxing Woman"
Nobuko Miyamoto - "A Taxing Woman"
Masahiko Tsugawa - "A Taxing Woman", "Night Train"
Rino Katase - "The Polar Wife II" (極道の妻たち II), "Yoshiwara Enjyo" (吉原炎上)
12 1988
(Shōwa 63)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
The Silk Road (film)” (Junya Sato)
Junya Sato - "The Silk Road (film)"
Ichikawa Shinichi (市川森一 ) - "The Discarnates"
Toshiyuki Nishida - "The Silk Road (film)"
Sayuri Yoshinaga - "Tsuru-Crane-" (つる-鶴-), "A Chaos of Flowers"
Tsurutaro Kataoka - "The Discarnates", "Age of Witches" (妖女の時代)
Eri Ishida - “Wuthering Heights (1988 film)”, “Hope and Pain”, "A Chaos of Flowers"
13 1989
(Shōwa 64
/ Heisei 1)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Black Rain" (Shohei Imamura)
Shohei Imamura -"Black Rain"
Toshiro Ishido (石堂淑朗), Shohei Imamura - "Black Rain"
Rentaro Mikuni - “Tsuribaka Nisshi”, “Sen no Rikyū
Yoshiko Tanaka - "Black Rain"
Bando Eiji - “Ah yes” (あ・うん)
Etsuko Ichihara - “Black Rain
Beat Takeshi, who was nominated for Outstanding Actor in “Violent Cop (1989 film)” appeared at the beginning of Kurama Tengu (a novel by Jirō Osaragi) and became a hot topic.
14 1990
(Heisei 2)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Childhood Days” (Masahiro Shinoda)
Masahiro Shinoda - Childhood Days
Taichi Yamada - "Childhood Days"
Ittoku Kishibe - "The Sting of Death"
Keiko Matsuzaka - "The Sting of Death"
Renji Ishibashi - “Park Street Cats” (公園通りの猫たち), “Roningai”, "Ready to shoot me" (われに撃つ用意あり)
Eri Ishida - “Tsuribaka Nisshi 2”, “Tsuribaka Nisshi 3” “I haven't dreamed of flying for a while” (飛ぶ夢をしばらく見ない)
Akira Kurosawa, who declined the nomination for “Kagemusha” in the 4th edition, accepted the work award and director nomination for “Dreams (1990 film)”, but did not win an award.
15 1991
(Heisei 3)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"My Sons" (Yoji Yamada)
Kihachi Okamoto - "Rainbow Kids"
Kihachi Okamoto - "Rainbow Kids"
Rentaro Mikuni - “Tsuribaka Nisshi 4”, “My Sons
Tanie Kitabayashi- "Rainbow Kids"
Masatoshi Nagase - "My Sons", "Mourning Work" (喪の仕事)
Emi Wakui - “No Worries on the Recruit Front”, “My Sons
Nakao Sakai, who worked on many actresses' hairstyles for director Yasujiro Ozu and director Akira Kurosawa, received the Association Special Award.[4]
16 1992
(Heisei 4)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Sumo Do, Sumo Don't" (Masayuki Suo)
Masayuki Suo - “Sumo Do, Sumo Don't"
Masayuki Suo - “Sumo Do, Sumo Don't"
Masahiro Motoki - “Sumo Do, Sumo Don't"
Yoshiko Mita - "Tōki Rakujitsu"
Naoto Takenaka - “Sumo Do, Sumo Don't",“ Original Sin (1992 film)
Miwako Fujitani - "The Oil-Hell Murder", Sobered Sosuke (寝盗られ宗介)
17 1993
(Heisei 5)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"School" (学校 (映画) (Yoji Yamada)
Yoji Yamada - "Tora-san's Matchmaker", "School" (学校 (映画)
Yoji Yamada, Yoshitaka Asama - "Tora-san's Matchmaker", "School" (学校 (映画)
Toshiyuki Nishida - "School" (学校 (映画), “Tsuribaka Nisshi 6
Emi Wakui - "Rainbow Bridge" (虹の橋)
Kunie Tanaka - "School" (学校 (映画), "Lone Wolf and Cub: Final Conflict", "Rainbow Bridge" (虹の橋)
Kyoko Kagawa - "Madadayo"
18 1994
(Heisei 6)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Crest of BetrayalKinji Fukasaku
Kinji Fukasaku - “Crest of Betrayal””
Motomu Furuta (古田求) / Kinji Fukasaku - “Crest of Betrayal””
Kōichi Satō (actor) - “Crest of Betrayal””
Saki Takaoka - “Crest of Betrayal””
Kiichi Nakai - "47 Ronin (1994 film)"
Shigeru Muroi - "Ghost Pub"
19 1995
(Heisei 7)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"A Last Note" (Kaneto Shindo)
Kaneto Shindo - "A Last Note"
Kaneto Shindo - "A Last Note"
Rentaro Mikuni - "Three times straits" (三たびの海峡)
Yuko Asano - "Kura (film)"
Naoto Takenaka - "East Meets West (1995 film)"
Nobuko Otowa - "A Last Note"
Independent production “A Last Note" (distribution: Japanese Herald Film) won the Best Film Award.
20 1996
(Heisei 8)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Shall We Dance? (1996 film)” (Masayuki Suo)
Masayuki Suo - “Shall We Dance?
Masayuki Suo - “Shall We Dance?
Koji Yakusho - “Shall We Dance?
Tamiyo Kusakari- “Shall We Dance?
Naoto Takenaka - “Shall We Dance?
Eriko Watanabe - “Shall We Dance?
"Shall We Dance? (1996 film)" won 14 awards, the highest ever.
21 1997
(Heisei 9)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Princess Mononoke” (Hayao Miyazaki)
Shohei Imamura - "The Eel (film)"
Koki Mitani - “Welcome Back, Mr. McDonald
Koji Yakusho - "The Eel (film)"
Hitomi Kuroki - A Lost Paradise
Masahiko Nishimura - “Welcome Back, Mr. McDonald
Mitsuko Baisho - "The Eel (film)"
Princess Mononoke” was the first animated work nominated for an award and won the Best Film Award.
22 1998
(Heisei 10)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Begging for Love" (Hideyuki Hirayama)
Hideyuki Hirayama - "Begging for Love"
Yoshinobu Tei (鄭 義信) - "Begging for Love"
Akira Emoto - "Dr. Akagi"
Mieko Harada - "Begging for Love"
Chosuke Ikariya - "Bayside Shakedown (film)"
Kumiko Aso - "Dr. Akagi"
23 1999
(Heisei 11)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Poppoya" (Yasuo Furuhata)
Yasuo Furuhata - "Poppoya"
Yoshiki Iwama (岩間芳樹), Yasuo Furuhata - "Poppoya"
Ken Takakura - "Poppoya"
Shinobu Otake - "Poppoya"
Jun Kobayashi - "Poppoya"
Kishimoto Kayoko - "Kikujiro"
24 2000
(Heisei 12)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"After the Rain (film)" (Takashi Koizumi)
Junji Sakamoto - "Face (2000 film)"
Akira Kurosawa - “After the Rain (film)
Akira Terao - "After the Rain (film)"
Sayuri Yoshinaga - "Nagasaki Hanging out" (長崎ぶらぶら節)
Kōichi Satō (actor) - "Whiteout (2000 film)"
Mieko Harada - "After the Rain (film)"
25 2001
(Heisei 13)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Spirited Away” (Hayao Miyazaki)
Isao Yukisada - "Go (Kaneshiro novel)"
Kankurō Kudō - “Go
Yosuke Kubozuka - “Go
Keiko Kishi -"Kaa-chan" (かあちゃん)
Tsutomu Yamazaki - “Go
Ko Shibasaki - “Go
Ken Takakura declined the Best Actor Award for Firefly (2001). Arnold Schwarzenegger also appeared as a special guest to commemorate the 25th anniversary.
26 2002
(Heisei 14)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"The Twilight Samurai" (Yoji Yamada)
Yoji Yamada - “The Twilight Samurai
Yoji Yamada, Yoshitaka Asama (朝間 義隆) - "The Twilight Samurai"
Hiroyuki Sanada - "The Twilight Samurai"
Rie Miyazawa - "The Twilight Samurai"
Min Tanaka - "The Twilight Samurai"
Tanie Kitabayashi - “Letters from the Mountains (2002)” (阿弥陀堂だより)
The Twilight Samurai” achieved 12 awards after “Shall We Dance?” At the 20th edition.[5]
27 2003
(Heisei 15)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
When the Last Sword Is Drawn” (Yojiro Takida)
Yoshimitsu Morita - “Like Asura
Tomomi Tsutsui (筒井 ともみ) - "Like Asura"
Kiichi Nakai - "When the Last Sword Is Drawn"
Shinobu Terajima- "Akame 48 Waterfalls"
Kōichi Satō (actor) - "When the Last Sword Is Drawn"
Eri Fukatsu - “Like Asura
28 2004
(Heisei 16)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Half a Confession" (半落ち) (Kiyo Sasabe)
Yoichi Sai - Blood and Bones
Shinobu Yaguchi - "Swing Girls"
Akira Terao - "Half a Confession" (半落ち)
Kyoka Suzuki - Blood and Bones
Odagiri Joe - Blood and Bones
Masami Nagasawa - "Socrates in Love"
Masami Nagasawa, who appeared in “Socrates in Love” won the Best Supporting Actress Award at the age of 17, the youngest in all categories.
29 2005
(Heisei 17)
Best Work Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Always Sanchōme no Yūhi" (Takashi Yamazaki)
Takashi Yamazaki - "Always Sanchōme no Yūhi"
Takashi Yamazaki, Ryota Kosawa (古沢良太) - "Always Sanchōme no Yūhi"
Hidetaka Yoshioka -"Always Sanchōme no Yūhi"
Sayuri Yoshinaga - "Year One in the North" (北の零年)
Shinichi Tsutsumi - "Always Sanchōme no Yūhi"
Hiroko Yakushimaru - "Always Sanchōme no Yūhi"
Always Sanchōme no Yūhi” achieved 12 crowns in line with “The Twilight Samurai” at the 26th.[5]
30 2006
(Heisei 18)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Hula Girls” (Lee Sang-il)
The Girl Who Leapt Through Time” (Mamoru Hosoda)
Lee Sang-il - “Hula Girls
Lee Sang-il, Daisuke Habara - “Hula Girls
Ken Watanabe - "Memories of Tomorrow"
Miki Nakatani - "Memories of Matsuko"
Takashi Sasano - "Love and Honor (2006 film)"
Yū Aoi - “Hula Girls
The animation division was newly established at this time, and “The Girl Who Leapt Through Time” became the first award-winning work after the establishment of the animation division.

Takuya Kimura, “Love and Honor (2006 film)”, declined the Best Actor Award. In addition, “Hula Girl” (production / distribution: Cinekanon) won the Best Film Award since “Zigeunerweisen (film)” (4th) as an independent production and distribution.

31 2007
(Heisei 19)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Tokyo Tower: Mom and Me, and Sometimes Dad" (Joji Matsuoka)
"Tekkonkinkreet" (Michael Arias)
Joji Matsuoka - "Tokyo Tower: Mom and Me, and Sometimes Dad"
Suzuki Matsuo - "Tokyo Tower: Mom and Me, and Sometimes Dad"
Hidetaka Yoshioka - "Always Zoku Sanchōme no Yūhi"
Kirin Kiki - "Tokyo Tower: Mom and Me, and Sometimes Dad"
Kaoru Kobayashi - "Tokyo Tower: Mom and Me, and Sometimes Dad"
Masako Motai - “I Just Didn't Do It
"Tokyo Tower: Mom and Me, and Sometimes Dad" has won several awards and won numerous awards. In an interview with Kirin Kiki in the magazine En-Taxi she said "I was not enough work to win the award", "I did not agree with the director from the time of shooting, I did not feel good work was completed", objection to the favorable evaluation of this work and each prize winning.
32 2008
(Heisei 20)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Departures" (Yōjirō Takita)
"Ponyo" (Hayao Miyazaki)
Yōjirō Takita - "Departures"
Kundō Koyama - "Departures"
Masahiro Motoki - "Departures"
Tae Kimura - "All Around Us"
Tsutomu Yamazaki - "Departures"
Kimiko Yo - "Departures"
33 2009
(Heisei 21)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Shizumanu Taiyō" (Setsuro Wakamatsu)
Summer Wars” (Mamoru Hosoda)
Daisaku Kimura - "Mt. Tsurugidake"
Miwa Nishikawa - "Dear Doctor (film)"
Ken Watanabe - Shizumanu Taiyō
Takako Matsu - "Villon's Wife (film)"
Teruyuki Kagawa - “Mt. Tsurugidake"
Kimiko Yo - "Dear Doctor (film)"
Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama attended the award ceremony as the first active prime minister. He gave a speech about the management restructuring issue of Japan Airlines, which was the model of the film, and the work that won the Best Film Award.[6][7][8]
34 2010
(Heisei 22)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Confessions (2010 film)" (Tetsuya Nakashima)
"Arrietty" (Hiromasa Yonebayashi)
Tetsuya Nakashima - "Confessions (2010 film)"
Tetsuya Nakashima - "Confessions (2010 film)"
Satoshi Tsumabuki - Villain (2010 film)
Eri Fukatsu - Villain (2010 film)
Akira Emoto- Villain (2010 film)
Kirin Kiki - Villain (2010 film)
35 2011
(Heisei 23)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Yō kame no semi (八日目の蟬)" (Izuru Narushima)
From Up on Poppy Hill” (Gorō Miyazaki)
Izuru Narushima - "Yō kame no semi (八日目の蟬)"
Satoko Okudera - "Yō kame no semi (八日目の蟬)"
Yoshio Harada - "Someday (2011 film)"
Mao Inoue - "Yō kame no semi (八日目の蟬)"
Denden - "Cold Fish"
Hiromi Nagasaku - "Yō kame no semi (八日目の蟬)"
Since this time was the start of stereophonic broadcasting with terrestrial digital broadcasting of the NTV series. In addition to the 10th day of the “Eighth Day Samurai”, the deceased Yoshio Harada won the Best Actor Award at the award ceremony.[9]
36 2012
(Heisei 24)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
The Kirishima Thing” (Daihachi Yoshida)
Wolf Children” (Mamoru Hosoda)
Daihachi Yoshida - “The Kirishima Thing
Kenji Uchida (film director) - "The Kirishima Thing"
Hiroshi Abe - "Thermae Romae"
Kirin Kiki - "Chronicle of My Mother"
Hideji Ōtaki - "Anata e"
Kimiko Yo - "Anata e"
37 2013
(Heisei 25)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
The Great Passage” (Yuya Ishii (director))
"The Wind Rises" (Hayao Miyazaki)
Yuya Ishii - “The Great Passage
Kensaku Watanabe - “The Great Passage
Ryuhei Matsuda - “The Great Passage
Yōko Maki - "The Ravine of Goodbye"
Lily Franky - "Like Father, Like Son (2013 film)"
Yōko Maki - "Like Father, Like Son (2013 film)"
The Great Passage” received 6 crowns.[10] In addition, Yoko Maki won the Best Actress Award for “The Grudge” and the Supporting Actress Award for “Like Father, Like Son (2013 film)”.[10]
38 2014
(Heisei 26)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
The Eternal Zero” (Takashi Yamazaki)
"Stand by Me Doraemon" (Takashi Yamazaki)
Takashi Yamazaki - “The Eternal Zero
Akihiro Dobashi (土橋章宏) - "Samurai Hustle"
Junichi Okada - “The Eternal Zero
Rie Miyazawa - Pale Moon (film)
Junichi Okada - "A Samurai Chronicle"
Haru Kuroki - “The Little House (film)
"The Eternal Zero" received 8 crowns[11]

Additionally, Junichi Okada won the Best Actor in The Eternal Zero and Best Supporting Actor in A Samurai Chronicle.[12]

39 2015
(Heisei 27)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Our Little Sister” (Hirokazu Kore-eda)
"The Boy and the Beast" (Mamoru Hosoda)
Hirokazu Kore-eda - “Our Little Sister
Shin Adachi (足立紳) - "100 Yen Love"
Kazunari Ninomiya - “Nagasaki: Memories of My Son
Sakura Ando - "100 Yen Love"
Masahiro Motoki - “The Emperor in August
Haru Kuroki - “Nagasaki: Memories of My Son
40 2016
(Heisei 28)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"Shin Godzilla" (Hideaki Anno and Shinji Higuchi)
In This Corner of the World (film)” (Sunao Katabuchi)
Hideaki Anno and Shinji Higuchi - "Shin Godzilla"
Makoto Shinkai - "Your Name"
Kōichi Satō - "64: Part I"
Rie Miyazawa - "Her Love Boils Bathwater"
Satoshi Tsumabuki - Rage (2016 film)
Hana Sugisaki - "Her Love Boils Bathwater"
"Shin Godzilla" achieved 7 crowns.

For the first time at the 40th time, an animation work won the Best Screenplay Award.

41 2017
(Heisei 29)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
"The Third Murder" (Hirokazu Kore-eda)
"Night Is Short, Walk On Girl" (夜は短し歩けよ乙女) (Masaaki Yuasa)
Hirokazu Kore-eda - "The Third Murder"
Hirokazu Kore-eda - "The Third Murder"
Masaki Suda -"Wilderness: Part One" (あゝ、荒野前編)
Yū Aoi - "Birds Without Names"
Kōji Yakusho - "The Third Murder"
Suzu Hirose - "The Third Murder"
"The Third Murder" achieved 6 crowns.[13]

Director Hirokazu Kore-eda of "The Third Murder" won the Best Editorial Award, Best Editing Award and Best Screenplay Award at the same time.

42 2018
(Heisei 30)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Shoplifters”” (Hirokazu Kore-eda)
Mirai (film)” (Mamoru Hosoda)
Hirokazu Kore-eda - “Shoplifters
Hirokazu Kore-eda - “Shoplifters
Kōji Yakusho - "The Blood of Wolves"
Sakura Ando - “Shoplifters
Tori Matsuzaka - "The Blood of Wolves"
Kirin Kiki - “Shoplifters
43 2019
(Heisei 31
/ Reiwa 1)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
The Journalist” (Michihito Fuji)
Weathering with You” (Makoto Shinkai)
Hideki Takeuchi - “Fly Me to the Saitama
Yūichi Tokunaga - “Fly Me to the Saitama
Tori Matsuzaka - "The Journalist"
Shim Eun-kyung - “The Journalist
Ryo Yoshizawa - "Kingdom"
Masami Nagasawa - "Kingdom"
44 2020
(Reiwa 2)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress Award
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Midnight Swan
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba – The Movie: Mugen Train
Setsurō Wakamatsu - Fukushima 50
Akiko Nogi – The Voice of Sin
Tsuyoshi Kusanagi - Midnight Swan
Masami NagasawaMother
Ken Watanabe - Fukushima 50
Haru Kuroki - The Asadas
45 2021
(Reiwa 3)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress Award
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Drive My Car
Evangelion: 3.0+1.0 Thrice Upon a Time
Ryusuke Hamaguchi - Drive My Car
Ryusuke Hamaguchi and Takamasa Ōe - Drive My Car
Hidetoshi Nishijima - Drive My Car
Kasumi ArimuraWe Made a Beautiful Bouquet
Ryohei Suzuki - Last of the Wolves
Kaya Kiyohara - In The Wake
46 2022
(Reiwa 4)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress Award
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
A Man
The First Slam Dunk
Kei Ishikawa - A Man
Kōsuke Mukai - A Man
Satoshi Tsumabuki - A Man
Yukino Kishii - Small, Slow but Steady
Masataka Kubota - A Man
Sakura Ando - A Man
47 2023
(Reiwa 5)
Best Work Award
Best Animation Award
Best Director Award
Best Screenplay Award
Best Actor Award
Best Actress Award
Best Supporting Actor Award
Best Supporting Actress Award
Godzilla Minus One
The Boy and the Heron
Wim Wenders - Perfect Days
Takashi Yamazaki - Godzilla Minus One
Koji Yakusho - Perfect Days
Sakura Ando - Monster
Hayato Isomura - The Moon
Sakura Ando - Godzilla Minus One

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "第38回 日本アカデミー賞授賞式 (The 38th Japan Academy Prize Award ceremony)]". Archived from the original on 2014-09-28. Retrieved 2015-01-16.
  2. ^ "日本アカデミー賞とは?", Japan Academy Film Prize Association. Retrieved on 2020-07-03.(in Japanese)
  3. ^ 映画神像について (in Japanese). 日本アカデミー賞公式サイト. Archived from the original on 2006-12-09. Retrieved 2007-02-04.
  4. ^ 中尾さかいさん(元東宝ヘアデザイナー)死去 読売新聞 1997年9月2日 朝刊31ページ
  5. ^ a b "「ALWAYS 三丁目の夕日」が12冠". 朝日新聞社. 2006-03-04.
  6. ^ 『アカデミー授賞式で首相、「JALは沈んじゃったが…」』 Archived 2010-03-07 at the Wayback Machine - 産経新聞 2010年3月5日
  7. ^ 『渡辺謙栄冠!鳩山首相が祝福「あなたこそ沈まぬ太陽」…日本アカデミー賞授賞式』 Archived 2010-03-07 at the Wayback Machine - スポーツ報知 2010年3月6日
  8. ^ 『渡辺謙、涙の戴冠「一番ほしかった」』 Archived 2010-03-07 at the Wayback Machine - デイリースポーツ 2010年3月6日
  9. ^ "日本アカデミー賞、『八日目の蝉』が10冠! 主演女優賞・井上真央「逃げなくてよかった」". オリコンスタイル. 2012-03-02. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  10. ^ a b "『舟を編む』に日本アカデミー賞! 松田龍平が主演男優賞、真木よう子は女優2冠の快挙". シネマカフェ. 2014-03-07. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  11. ^ "【日本アカデミー賞】『永遠の0』が席巻 最優秀作品賞など8冠獲得". オリコンスタイル. 2015-02-27. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  12. ^ "「永遠の0」が8冠 日本アカデミー賞". 日本経済新聞. 2015-02-27. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
  13. ^ "「三度目の殺人」が最多6冠!第41回日本アカデミー賞授賞式". 映画ナタリー. 2018-03-02. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
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