Ken Takakura Movies and Career Information
Feb 16, 1931
Kitakyushu
Actor
Ken Takakura (高倉 健, Takakura Ken), born Gouichi Oda (小田 剛一, Oda Gōichi, February 16, 1931, in Kitakyūshū, Fukuoka, Japan), is a Japanese actor best known for his brooding style and the stoic presence he brings to his roles. Takakura gained his streetwise swagger and tough-guy persona watching yakuza turf battles over the lucrative black market and racketeering in postwar Fukuoka. This subject was covered in one of his most famous movies, Showa Zankyo-den (Remnants of Chivalry in the Showa Era), in which he played an honorable old-school yakuza among the violent post-war gurentai. A graduate of Meiji University in Tokyo Takakura happened by an audition in 1955 at the Toei Film Company, and decided to look in. Toei found a natural in Takakura as he debuted with Denko Karate Uchi (Lightning Karate Blow) in 1956. Japan experienced a boom in gangster films in the 1960s as the Japanese people struggled with the generational differences between those raised in pre-war and post-war Japan and these were Takakura's stock and trade. His breakout role would be in the 1965 film Abashiri Prison, and its sequel Abashiri Bangaichi: Bokyohen (Abashiri Prison: Longing for Home, also 1965), in which
- Ken Takakura Movies before 2012
- Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles (Qian li zou dan qi) 2006
- Red Peony Gambler: Flower Cards Match (Hibotan bakuto: Hanafuda shobu) 1969
- Contemporary Tales of Chivalry (Showa zankyo den) 1965
- Hishakaku and Kiratsune (Jinsei-gekijo: Hishakaku to kiratsune)
- Fugitive From the Past (Kiga kaikyo)
- Outsiders (Mori to mizuumi no matsuri)
- Yakuza
- Never Give Up
- Station (La stazione)
- Black Rain
- Black Rain (1989)