Amigasa Jūbei | |
---|---|
Japanese | 編笠十兵衛 |
Genre | Jidaigeki |
Directed by | Tokuzō Tanaka Kazuo Ikehiro |
Starring | Hideki Takahashi Shigeru Tsuyuguchi Mikio Narita Ryūtarō Ōtomo Yūnosuke Itō Yoshi Katō Chiezō Kataoka |
Theme music composer | Takeo Watanabe |
Country of origin | Japan |
Original language | Japanese |
No. of episodes | 26 |
Production | |
Running time | 45 minutes (per episode) |
Production companies | Fuji TV, TOEI |
Original release | |
Network | Fuji TV |
Release | October 1974 – April 1975 |
Amigasa Jūbei (編笠十兵衛) is a Japanese television jidaigeki or period drama that was broadcast from 1974 to 1975. It is based on Shōtarō Ikenami's novel by the same title.[1][2] It depicts the stories of Tsukimori Jūbei and the Forty-seven rōnin.[3] A remake was aired in 1997 on Fuji television.[4][5]
Plot
Tsukimori Jūbei is an Onmitsu(Oniwaban). He and Masafuyu Nakane help Forty-seven rōnin′s revenge.[6] On the other hand, Kobayashi Haihachi attempts to stop it and protect Kira Yoshinaka in various ways by Uesugi Noritsuna's(Kira Yoshinaka's son.) order.
In addition, Funazu challenges Jūbei to a duel again and again, and tries to kill Jūbei persistently.[7]
Characters
- Hideki Takahashi : Tsukimori Jūbei (Amigasa Jūbei)[8]
- Shigeru Tsuyuguchi : Heyhachi kobayashi
- Mikio Narita : Funazu Yakurō is a ruthless ronin.
- Yutaka Nakajima : Senya
- Goichi Yamada as Horibe Yasubei
- Takeya Nakamura : Ōishi Yoshio
- Go Wakabayashi : Fuwa Kazuemon
- Yoichi Hayashi : Kayano Sanpei
- Yumiko Nogawa : Kaoru
- Susumu Kurobe :Nagai/Osu
- Taeko Hattori : Yae
- Isamu Nagato : Tawaraboshi Genba
- Yuko Hama : Minae
- Jūkei Fujioka : Nagao Kanbei
- Tatsuo Endō : Kajikawa Yoriteru
- Yoko Hayama : Oshun
- Yoshio Inaba : Uchida Saburozaemon
- Akira Nakao : Tada Dempachiro
- Hiroko Fuji : Shizue
- Yoshi Katō : Kayano Hichirozaemon
- Eiji Okada : Yanagisawa Yoshiyasu
- Yūnosuke Itō : Kira Yoshinaka
- Ryūtarō Ōtomo : Okuda Magodayou[8]
- Chiezō Kataoka : Nakane Masafuyu
Episodes
- 1, Tosho directed by Tokuzō Tanaka
- 2, Seppuku directed by Tokuzō Tanaka
- 3, Ketsudan directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 4, Shugeki directed by Masatake Mastuo
- 5, Zansatsu directed by Masahiko Izawa
- 6, Tsuioku directed by Masahiko Izawa
- 7, Shikyaku directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 8, Shuppu directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 9, Enjō directed by Kazuo Ikehiro
- 10, Bojō directed by Kazuo Ikehiro
- 11, Datsuraku directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 12, Danatsu directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 13, Kuromaku directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 14, Sennyu directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 15, Giwaku directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 16, Tsuiseki directed by Tokuzō Tanaka
- 17, Kenshin directed by Tokuzō Tanaka
- 18, Bōky directed by Tokuzō Tanaka
- 19, Hidō directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 20, Shikon directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 21, Bōryaku directed by Masahiko Izawa
- 22, Chusedtsu directed by Masahiko Izawa
- 23, Kansei directed by Buichi Saitō
- 24, Zenya directed by Masahiko Izawa
- 25, Uchiiri directed by Masatake Matsuo
- 26, Ketsubetsu directed by Masatake Matsuo
References
- ↑ 鬼平」を極める』2、フジテレビ出版、1995年、140頁。ISBN 4-594-01822-X
- ↑ "Amigasa Jūbei". Jidaigeki.com. Retrieved June 3, 2017.
- ↑ "番組詳細 Amigasa Jūbei". timetable. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
- ↑ "Amigasa Jūbei towa". kotobank. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
- ↑ "ペリーのちょんまげ". 時代劇チャンネル. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
- ↑ "Amigasa Jūbei". ドラマデータ. Retrieved April 29, 2019.
- ↑ "時代劇スター 高橋英樹". toeich. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
- 1 2 "Ryūtarō Ōtomo". 映画DB. Retrieved August 17, 2021.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.