Yoshitsune (TV series)
Yoshitsune | |
---|---|
Genre | Taiga drama |
Directed by | |
Starring | Hideaki Takizawa Ken Matsudaira Aya Ueto Satomi Ishihara Kiyotaka Nanbara Tsuyoshi Ujiki Atsushi Itō Hiroshi Abe Yukiyoshi Ozawa Kazushige Nagashima Kayoko Shiraishi Ren Osugi Shingo Tsurumi Masaya Kato Masao Kusakari Akihiro Miwa Mari Natsuki Akira Nakao Naomi Zaizen Izumi Inamori Nenji Kobayashi Keiko Matsuzaka Tetsurō Tamba Mikijirō Hira Kiichi Nakai Hideki Takahashi Tetsuya Watari |
Narrated by | Kayoko Shiraishi |
Theme music composer | Taro Iwashiro |
Country of origin | Japan |
Original language | Japanese |
No. of episodes | 49 |
Release | |
Original network | NHK |
Original release | January 9 December 11, 2005 | –
Yoshitsune (義経) is a Japanese television drama series originally broadcast between 9 January and 11 December 2005, with a three-part special compilation being aired from 24 December to 25 December 2005. The 44th Taiga Drama, the original work is by , screenplay by and starring Hideaki Takizawa.
Plot[]
In the Heiji Rebellion, Taira no Kiyomori defeats Minamoto no Yoshitomo. Yoshitomo flees the battle but is betrayed by his own vassal and killed in Owari province. Yoritomo (one of Yoshitomo's sons) is captured, but Kiyomori decides to spare him and banishes him to Izu. Yoshitomo's beloved concubine Tokiwa Gozen flees to Kyoto with their three children. After learning that Kiyomori has arrested her own mother, Tokiwa goes to him to plead for mercy. Kiyomori spares the lives of the children, sending the older two to temples, and brings the youngest boy, Ushiwaka, and Tokiwa into his household. Treating him as his own child, Kiyomori receives criticism of his generous behavior towards Ushiwaka, the son of his enemy. Soon, he sends Ushiwaka to the Kurama temple where he is renamed Shanao. Shanao frequently escapes the temple at night, and this behavior makes it clear that he will not enter the priesthood. After learning the true identity of his father, of his Genji lineage, and of Kiyomori's plans to move against him he bids his mother farewell and travels northeast to Oshu.
While Kiyomori starts to build a dream city and international port in Fukuhara, he also starts to work his way into the Imperial Court, eventually marrying his daughter Tokiko to the Emperor. With this new power the Heike grow fierce and unpopular with the court and people of Kyoto. Shanao, now named Yoshitsune after his rite of manhood, is living under the guardianship of Fujiwara no Hidehira and decides to join his exiled older brother Minamoto no Yoritomo and throws himself into the feud between the Heike and Genji.
Cast[]
Minamoto clan[]
- Hideaki Takizawa as Minamoto no Yoshitsune
- Ryunosuke Kamiki as young Yoshitsune (aka Ushiwakamaru)
- Kiichi Nakai as Minamoto no Yoritomo
- Sosuke Ikematsu as young Yoritomo
- Ken Matsudaira as Benkei
- Aya Ueto as Utsubo
- Masaya Kato as Minamoto no Yoshitomo
- Izumi Inamori as Tokiwa Gozen
- Satomi Ishihara as Shizuka Gozen
- Eiko Koike as Tomoe Gozen
- Naomi Zaizen as Hōjō Masako
- Nenji Kobayashi as Hōjō Tokimasa
- Noboru Kimura as Hōjō Yoshitoki
- Tetsurō Tamba as Minamoto no Yorimasa
- Tsubasa Imai as Nasu no Yoichi
- Akira Nakao as Kajiwara Kagetoki
- Shun Oguri as Kajiwara Kagesue
Taira clan[]
- Tetsuya Watari as Taira no Kiyomori
- Keiko Matsuzaka as Taira no Tokiko
- Shingo Tsurumi as Taira no Munemori
- Shigeki Hosokawa as Taira no Shigehira
- Hiroshi Abe as Taira no Tomomori
- Noriko Nakagoshi as Taira no Tokuko
- Maki Goto as Yoshiko
Northern Fujiwara[]
- Hideki Takahashi as Fujiwara no Hidehira
- as Fujiwara no Yasuhira
- Kazushige Nagashima as Fujiwara no Kunihira
Imperial family[]
- Mikijirō Hira as Emperor Go-Shirakawa
- Mari Natsuki as Tango no Tsubone
- as Emperor Antoku
- Masao Kusakari as Taira no Tomoyasu
Accolades[]
8th Nikkan Sports Drama Grand Prix[1]
- Won: Best Drama
- Won: Best Actor - Hideaki Takizawa
References[]
- ^ "歴代の受賞者・受賞作品". Nikkan Sports. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
- Taiga drama
- 2005 Japanese television series debuts
- 2005 Japanese television series endings
- Television shows based on Japanese novels
- Television series set in the 12th century
- Japanese television stubs