Haruhiko Arai | |
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Born | 1947 (age 76–77) |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
Haruhiko Arai (荒井 晴彦, Arai Haruhiko, born 1947) is a Japanese screenwriter. [1] He is also a publisher and an editor of the Eiga Geijutsu magazine [2] and a professor of the Japan Institute of the Moving Image. [3]
Arai won the Mainichi Film Award for best screenplay for the film W's Tragedy in 1984. [4] He wrote the screenplay for Junji Sakamoto's KT (2001), [5] and also penned the screenplays for Ryuichi Hiroki's films Vibrator (2003) and It's Only Talk (2005). [6] [7] In 2013, he wrote the scripts for Junichi Inoue's A Woman and War and Shinji Aoyama's The Backwater. [8] [9]
His published but unfilmed scenario, Divine Comedy (神聖喜劇, Shinsei kigeki), has been called lesescenario by figures such as the director Shinichiro Sawai. [10]
Haruhiko Arai | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | 1947 (age 76–77) |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
Haruhiko Arai (荒井 晴彦, Arai Haruhiko, born 1947) is a Japanese screenwriter. [1] He is also a publisher and an editor of the Eiga Geijutsu magazine [2] and a professor of the Japan Institute of the Moving Image. [3]
Arai won the Mainichi Film Award for best screenplay for the film W's Tragedy in 1984. [4] He wrote the screenplay for Junji Sakamoto's KT (2001), [5] and also penned the screenplays for Ryuichi Hiroki's films Vibrator (2003) and It's Only Talk (2005). [6] [7] In 2013, he wrote the scripts for Junichi Inoue's A Woman and War and Shinji Aoyama's The Backwater. [8] [9]
His published but unfilmed scenario, Divine Comedy (神聖喜劇, Shinsei kigeki), has been called lesescenario by figures such as the director Shinichiro Sawai. [10]