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Highest-grossing Japanese films in Japan by distributor rentals up until 1996 Year Title Japanese box office (est.) Format Rentals Gross receipts Admissions Ref. 1950: The Munekata Sisters: ¥83,780,000: Unknown Unknown [72] Live-action 1951: The Tale of Genji: ¥141,050,000: Unknown Unknown 1952: The Flavor of Green Tea over Rice: ¥ ...
The following is a list of the highest-grossing films in Japan. This list only accounts for the films' box office earnings at cinemas and not their ancillary revenues (i.e. home video sales, video rentals , television broadcasts, or merchandise sales).
Lists of films produced in Japan include: List of Japanese films before 1910; List of Japanese films of the 1910s; List of Japanese films of the 1920s; List of Japanese films of the 1930s; List of Japanese films of the 1940s; Lists of Japanese films of the 1950s; Lists of Japanese films of the 1960s; Lists of Japanese films of the 1970s
Gate of Hell, a 1953 film by Teinosuke Kinugasa, was the first movie that filmed using Eastmancolor film, Gate of Hell was both Daiei's first color film and the first Japanese color movie to be released outside Japan, receiving an Academy Honorary Award in 1954 for Best Costume Design by Sanzo Wada and an Honorary Award for Best Foreign ...
Run for Money the Movie: Tokyo Mission: Masaki Nishiura: Takumi Kawanishi, Sota Nakajima, Shoya Kimata, Aomi Kaneshiro, Reiya Seguchi, Daiki Sato [101] Sana: Let Me Hear: Takashi Shimizu: Nagisa Shibuya, Ikoi Hayase, Soma Santoki, Towa Araki, Maya Imamori, Makita Sports, Shota Sometani [102] 26: What If Tokugawa Ieyasu Became Prime Minister ...
The following is a list of 2021 box office number-one films in Japan by week. When the number-one film in gross is not the same as the number-one film in admissions, both are listed. When the number-one film in gross is not the same as the number-one film in admissions, both are listed.
At the Japanese box office, it was the sixth highest-grossing Japanese film of the year, earning a distribution income (distributor rentals) of ¥750 million in 1988. [30] It topped the box office at the onset, making it a success in the Japanese market. [51] [52] By 2000, the film had earned a Japanese distribution rental income of ¥800 ...
Nobody Knows (誰も知らない, Dare mo Shiranai) is a 2004 Japanese drama film based on the 1988 Sugamo child abandonment case. [2] The film is written, produced, directed and edited by Hirokazu Kore-eda, and it stars Yuya Yagira, Ayu Kitaura, and Hiei Kimura.