Mainichi Film Award for Best Sound Recording

Last updated
Mainichi Film Award for Best Sound Recording
Awarded forBest sound recording of the year
Country Japan
First awarded1947

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Sound Recording is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards. [1] [2]

Award Winners

YearFilmRecording Technician
1947 Joyū Shigeharu Yasue
1948 Waga Shōgai no Kagayakeru Hi Saburō Ōmura
1949Good Bye Masakazu Kamiya
1950 Escape at Dawn
Portrait of Madame Yuki
Masakazu Kamiya
1951 Repast Masao Fujiyoshi
1952 Ikiru Fumio Yanoguchi
1953 Ugetsu Iwao Ōtani
1954 Kono Hiroi Sora no Dokokani
The Garden of Women
Twenty-Four Eyes
Hisao Ōno
1955 Floating Clouds Hisashi Shimonaga
1956 Shin Heike Monogatari
Shin Heike Monogatari Yoshinaka o Meguru Sannin no Onna
Zangiku monogatari
Yoru no Kawa
Yukio Kaihara
1957 The Rice People
Jun'ai Monogatari
Hirokazu Iwata
1958 Equinox Flower Saburō Senoyoshi
1959 Saijo Kishitsu
My Second Brother
Fumio Hashimoto
1960 Yakuza Sensei
Ashita Hareruka
Masakazu Kamiya
1961Shaka Masao Ōsumi
1962 Harakiri Hideo Nishizaki
1963 Onna no Rekishi Masao Fujiyoshi
1964 Unholy Desire Koshirō Jinbo
1965 Tokyo Olympiad Toshihiko Inoue and recording staffs
1966Akogare Masao Fujiyoshi
1967 Portrait of Chieko
Sekishun
Toshio Tanaka
1968 The Sands of Kurobe Tetsuo Yasuda
Kenichi Benitani
1969 The Love Suicides at Amijima Hideo Nishizaki
1970 Men and War: Part I Tsuneo Furuyama
1971 Inochi Bō ni Furō
Silence
The Ceremony
Hideo Nishizaki
1972 The Long Darkness
Ongaku
Mutsutoshi Ōta
1973 Tsugaru Jongara Bushi Takaya Sugiura
1974 Himiko Hideo Nishizaki
1975 Matsuri no Junbi
Dokkoi! Ningenbushi
Yukio Kubota
1976 Inugamike no Ichizoku Tetsuya Ōhashi
1977 The Yellow Handkerchief Hiroshi Nakamura
1978 Third Base Yukio Kubota
1979 Vengeance Is Mine Shōtarō Yoshida
1980 Virus Kenichi Benitani
1981 The Love Suicides at Sonezaki
Eijanaika
Shōtarō Yoshida
1982 Mikan no Taikyoku Fumio Hashimoto
呂慶昌
1983 The Ballad of Narayama Kenichi Benitani
1984 Shanghai Vance King Kazuhisa Takahashi
1985 Sorekara
Love Letter
Early Spring Story
Tampopo
Fumio Hashimoto
1986 Uemura Naomi Monogatari Fumio Hashimoto
1987 The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On Toyohiko Kuribayashi
1988 Bokura no Nanokakan Sensō Ichirō Tsujii
1989 Pekin no Suika Masatoshi Yokomizo
Shōhei Hayashi
1990 The Sting of Death
Childhood Days
Hideo Nishizaki
1991 A Scene at the Sea Senji Horiuchi
1992 Original Sin Tsutomu Honda
1993 Bloom in the Moonlight Yoshio Horiike
Manabu Kakuhata
Byōin de Shinu to Iukoto Yasuo Hashimoto
1994 Like a Rolling Stone
Tokarefu
Kiyoshi Kakizawa
1995 Sharaku
Kinkyū Yobidashi Emergency Call
Tetsuo Segawa
1996 Nemuru Otoko Sōichi Inoue
A Class to Remember 2 Isao Suzuki
1997 Mi mo Kokoro mo Kōichi Hayashi
1998 Give It All Hiromichi Kōri
1999 Osaka Story
Gamera 3: The Revenge of Iris
Yasuo Hashimoto
2000 Face Fumio Hashimoto
2001 Onmyoji Osamu Onodera
Kiyoshi Kakizawa
2002 The Twilight Samurai Kazumi Kishida
2003 Hotel Hibiscus
Get Up!
Mitsugu Shiratori
2004 Nobody Knows Yutaka Tsurumaki
2005 Itsuka dokusho suruhi Masatoshi Yokomizo
2006 Hula Girls
Sway
Mitsugu Shiratori
What the Snow Brings Osamu Onodera
2007 Talk Talk Talk Masato Komatsu
2008 Departures Satoshi Ozaki
2009 Mt. Tsurugidake Kenichi Ishidera
2010 13 Assassins Jun Nakamura
2011 Postcard Satoshi Ozaki
2012 Kita no Kanaria Tachi Junichi Shima
2013 A Story of Yonosuke Masato Yano
2014 The Eternal Zero Ken'ichi Fujimoto
2015 Three Stories of Love Takeshi Ogawa
2016 Satoshi: A Move for Tomorrow Mitsugu Shiratori
2017 The Tokyo Night Sky Is Always the Densest Shade of Blue Hirokazu Katō and Kengo Takasuka
2018 Every Day A Good Day Noriyoshi Yoshida
2019 Another World Ken'ichi Fujimoto
2020 Underdog Kazunori Fujimoto
2021 Last of the Wolves Tomoharu Urata
2022 Small, Slow But Steady Takamitsu Kawai
2023 Okiku and the World Jun'ichi Shima

Related Research Articles

<i>Mainichi Shimbun</i> Japanese newspaper

The Mainichi Shimbun is one of the major newspapers in Japan, published by The Mainichi Newspapers Co.

Tomoko Tabata is a Japanese actress. She won the best supporting actress award from the Mainichi in 2004 for The Hidden Blade and Blood and Bones, and the best actress award at the Mainichi Film Awards for The Cowards Who Looked to the Sky in 2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shinobu Hashimoto</span> Japanese screenwriter (1918–2018)

Shinobu Hashimoto was a Japanese screenwriter, director and producer. A frequent collaborator of Akira Kurosawa, he wrote the scripts for critically acclaimed films such as Rashomon and Seven Samurai.

The Mainichi Film Awards are a series of annual film awards, sponsored by Mainichi Shimbun (毎日新聞), one of the largest newspaper companies in Japan, since 1946. It is the first film festival in Japan.

Keiko Matsuzaka is a Japanese actress.

Mainichi Kaasan is a Japanese comedy manga series written and illustrated by Rieko Saibara, based on her experiences as a housewife and mother. It was serialized on a weekly basis in the Mainichi Shimbun newspaper's morning edition from October 2002 to 26 June 2017. The manga was later collected into 14 tankōbon volumes. It won several awards, including the Excellence Award at the 8th Japan Media Arts Festival in 2004, the Short Story Award at the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prizes in 2005, and the President of the House of Councilors Award at the 40th Japan Cartoonist Awards in 2011. Mainichi Kaasan was adapted into an anime television series directed by Mitsuru Hongo that aired on TV Tokyo from 1 April 2009 to 25 March 2012. Spanning 142 episodes, the anime was licensed in English under the title Kaasan: Mom's Life on Crunchyroll's video streaming website. Mainichi Kaasan was also adapted into a live-action film directed by Shōtarō Kobayashi, released in theaters in Japan on 5 February 2011. The film starred the real-life divorced couple Kyōko Koizumi and Masatoshi Nagase as the titular kaasan and her husband. It won the Best Film for Asian New Talent Award at the 14th Shanghai International Film Festival in 2011. Additionally, Koizumi won the Best Actress Award at the 66th Mainichi Film Awards in 2012 and Nagase won the Best Actor Award at the 20th Japanese Movie Critics Awards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Keisuke Kinoshita</span> Japanese film director

Keisuke Kinoshita was a Japanese film director and screenwriter. While lesser-known internationally than contemporaries such as Akira Kurosawa, Kenji Mizoguchi and Yasujirō Ozu, he was a household figure in his home country, beloved by both critics and audiences from the 1940s to the 1960s. Among his best known films are Carmen Comes Home (1951), Japan's first colour feature, Tragedy of Japan (1953), Twenty-Four Eyes (1954), You Were Like a Wild Chrysanthemum (1955), Times of Joy and Sorrow (1957), The Ballad of Narayama (1958), and The River Fuefuki (1960).

It's a Summer Vacation Everyday is a Japanese film directed by Shūsuke Kaneko. Actress Hinako Saeki won the Newcomer of the Year award at the Japan Academy Awards and Best New Talent at the Yokohama Film Festival for her role in this film.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sachiko Hidari</span> Japanese actress

Sachiko Hidari was a Japanese actress and film director.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Keiju Kobayashi</span> Japanese actor

Keiju Kobayashi was a Japanese actor who appeared in 253 films in a career spanning 67 years.

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Actor is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Supporting Actor is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Supporting Actress is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Director is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Cinematography is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Screenplay is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Art Direction is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Best Music is a film award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Excellence Film (日本映画優秀賞) is an award given at the Mainichi Film Awards.

The Mainichi Film Award for Foreign Film Best One Award (毎日映画コンクール外国映画ベストワン賞), also known as Mainichi Film Award for Best Foreign Film, is an award given annually at the Mainichi Film Awards to recognize the best foreign films produced outside Japan. It was first presented in 1984, with Sophie's Choice being the first recipient of the award.

References

  1. "コンクールの歴史" [History of Mainichi Film Award] (in Japanese). The Mainichi Newspapers. Retrieved 2015-04-23.
  2. "Mainichi Film Concours" (in Japanese). IMDb.com, Inc. Retrieved 2015-04-23.