Sousuke Takaoka
Sousuke Takaoka | |
---|---|
高岡 蒼甫 | |
Born | Takaoka Sousuke 8 February 1982 Tokyo, Japan |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 2000-present |
Agent | Flying Box (2001 - 2006) Stardust Promotion (2006 - 2011) NowHere (2011 - present) |
Spouse(s) | Aoi Miyazaki (2007—2011) (Separated) |
Sousuke Takaoka (高岡 蒼甫, Takaoka Sōsuke, born February 8, 1982) is a Japanese actor, known for his break-out performance in the controversial movie Battle Royale.
Career[]
His break-out performance was in the controversial movie Battle Royale, in which he played the pacifistic Hiroki Sugimura (Boy #11). Takaoka then moved from muted heroics to active anti-heroism in portrayals of the grittier side of teenage violence, such as in Concrete. The film was based on the events of Junko Furuta's sadistic murder by four youths in 1988.
In 2006, for his role as the introspective Honda in Spring Snow, Takaoka gained a Best Supporting Actor nomination at the Blue Ribbon Awards, a Japanese film event judged by critics.[1]
Public image[]
In July 2011 Takaoka made headlines and attracted much controversy for several comments against the airing of Korean dramas on Japanese television. He stated on Twitter "I used to be indebted to Fuji TV in the past, but now I'm suspicious that they may actually be a Korean network. I'm questioning about what country I'm in as well. It offends me. If anything related to Korea is on broadcast, I just turn the TV off. It troubles me because I feel like I am being brainwashed", and "Since we're in Japan, I would like to see Japanese programs. I get scared every time I hear the word, 'Hallyu'". His comments resulted in a strong public backlash due to his previous role as a Zainichi Korean in the film Pacchigi as well as public protests against the airing of Korean dramas against Fuji TV. Due to the controversy about his statements he was reportedly dropped from his agency following his Tweets and his marriage to Aoi Miyazaki whom he stated shared his views was reportedly in jeopardy. However he later apologized for his statements and retracted his claims of Miyazaki sharing his views.[2][3][4][5][6]
Personal life[]
On June 15, 2007 he married Japanese actress Aoi Miyazaki, after dating her for seven years.[7] In December 2011, she divorced him.[8]
Filmography[]
- Battle Royale as Hiroki Sugimura (2000)
- Blue as Manabu Mizuuchi (2001)
- (2001)
- Red Shadow (2001)
- Blue Spring (2001)
- 17-sai (2003)
- (2004)
- Concrete as Tatsuo Oosugi (2004)
- Break Through! as An-sung Lee (2004)
- Tetsujin 28: The Movie (2005)
- Spring Snow as Shigekuni Honda (2005)
- Sugar and Spice as Yano (2006)
- (Ashita no watashi no tsukurikata) as Hiroyuki Tamura (2007)
- (Hîto Airando) (2007)
- Crows Zero as Izaki Shun (2007)
- (Aozora no ruretto) (2007)
- (2008)
- (Rookies: Sotsugyô) (2009)
- Crows Zero 2 (Kurôzu zero II) (2009)
- Be Sure to Share (Chanto Tsutaeru) (2009)
- Saru Lock The Movie (2010)
- Sankaku (2010)
- Zatoichi: The Last (2010)
- 13 Assassins (2010)
- (Wararaifu!!) (2011)
- Bokura ga Ita as Masafumi Takeuchi (2012)
- Dare to Stop Us as Nagisa Oshima (2018)
TV[]
- Taiyō no Kisetsu (2002) (Season of the Sun) (2002)
- (Ningen no Shomei) (Fuji TV / 2004)
- (Fuji TV / 2005)
- (2007)
- (NHK / 2007)
- Mop Girl (Moppu Gāru) (TV Asahi / 2007)
- The Negotiator (TV Asahi / 2008)
- Rookies (TBS / 2008)
- Saru Lock (NTV / 2009)
- (Riaru kurôzu) (Fuji TV / 2009)
- (Koshonin 2) (TV Asahi / 2009)
Theatre work[]
Takaoka is also a stage actor and appeared in The Lieutenant of Inishmore (Wee Thomas) by Martin McDonagh in June 2006.[9]
References[]
- ^ Hoga Central's report on Blue Ribbon Nominations Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-05-31. Retrieved 2014-05-30.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ "Anti-Korean Wave in Japan turns political - CNN Travel".
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-03-31. Retrieved 2015-08-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ http://iamkoream.com/japanese-protestors-rally-against-korean-dramas/
- ^ Brasor, Philip (21 August 2011). "Korean television dramas are not the real problem" – via Japan Times Online.
- ^ "Yahoo!Japan report on marriage".[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Takaoka Sousuke confirms divorce from Miyazaki Aoi". Tokyohive. 2011-12-20. Retrieved 2011-12-22.
- ^ E+ Theatrix: interview with the cast/crew of The Lieutenant of Inishmore (in Japanese)
External links[]
- Sousuke Takaoka at IMDb
- Sousuke Takaoka at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- News at Manilla Bulletin
- 1982 births
- Living people
- Japanese male film actors
- Japanese male stage actors
- Japanese male television actors
- Male actors from Tokyo
- 21st-century Japanese male actors
- Former Stardust Promotion artists