Sumiko Sakamoto
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Sumiko Sakamoto was born on November 26, 1936 in Osaka, Japan. Sakamoto is a singer and award-winning actress whose heartfelt performances made her a favorite of the late film director Shohei Imamura. Imamura cast her in three of his films, among them "The Ballad of Narayama," winner of the Palme d'Or at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival, in which her brilliant portrayal of an elderly mother not only earned her a kiss from Orson Welles, but also the Japanese Best Actress Award from Nihon Academy.
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The Buried Forest

The Ballad of Narayama

The Pornographers

Sometimes... Like a Prostitute

Homeless Dog

Rampaging Dog

Quick-Draw Dog

Return of Gun Dog

Stray Dog

The Stairway to the Distant Past

Escape from Japan

Warm Water Under a Red Bridge

Fearless Comrades
Be Free!
The Call of Flesh

The Silent Gun

Travel with Ghost

Salaryman Senka: Tanshin Funin

Legends of Honor

The Shogun and His Mistresses

Clamouring Canines

Trigger Happy Romeo

Silence Has No Wings

Young Boss: Leader's Flesh

My Father's Dragon

Tenamonya Sandogasa

Precious Moments

Watashi wa umi

Wind of the Ryūkyū Islands
