Junya Satō
Junya Satō
Junya Satō (佐藤 純彌, Satō Jun'ya, 6 November 1932 – 9 February 2019) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter. His son, Tōya Satō (佐藤 東弥, Satō Tōya), is also a film director. Born in Tokyo, Satō graduated from the University of Tokyo in 1956 with a degree in French literature. He joined the Toei studio and worked as an assistant to such directors as Tadashi Imai and Miyoji Ieki. He debuted as a director in 1963 with Rikugun Zangyaku Monogatari, for which he won a best newcomer's award at the Blue Ribbon Awards. While starting in mostly yakuza film, Satō eventually became known for big budget spectaculars. The Go Masters, a China-Japan co-production he co-directed with Duan Jishun, won the grand prize at the Montreal World Film Festival in 1983. He won the Japan Academy Prize for Director of the Year in 1989 for The Silk Road.
Yamato
The Bullet Train
The Silk Road
The Peking Man
Proof of the Man
Manhunt
Theater Of Life
Sakurada Gate Incident
Never Give Up
A True Story of the Private Ginza Police
The Private Police
The Last Kamikaze
The Go Masters
The Dream of Russia
Psychic: Traveler to the Unknown
The Gambler's Counterattack
Hold Me and Kiss Me
The Ando Gang Documentary Film
Organized Violence
Wolves, Pigs & Men