Tetta Sugimoto
9 titles
Filmography
9 results

Reincarnation
(2005)From the director of "The Grudge" and "The Grudge 2" comes Reincarnation, a suspenseful psychological horror film that deals with the topic of reincarnation.

Samurai Resurrection
(2003)Killed alongside 37,000 fellow peasants, the leader of a revolt is brought back from the dead, hell-bent on avenging the deaths of his comrades.

Still the Water
(2014)On the subtropical Japanese island of Amami, traditions about nature remain eternal. During the full-moon night of traditional dances in August, 16-year-old Kaito discovers a dead body.

Hard Days
(2023)Already running from a mess of problems, a desperate cop thinks he's gotten away with a hit-and-run. But there was a witness, and they've got his number.

Eye Love You
Sparks begin to fly when a telepathic woman who'd given up on love meets a kindhearted Korean student who thinks in a language she can’t understand.

Innocence, Fight Against False Charges
[With ENG Subtitles] Handling the most difficult cases with a 100% chance of a guilty verdict, Taku Kurokawa tries to reverse the false convictions.

Outrage
(2010)The Japanese underworld’s rival clans rise through the ranks of power in the stock market, but their betrayals and blood vengeance are unending.

City Hunter
(2024)An exceptional marksman and smooth operator, private eye Ryo Saeba reluctantly forms an alliance with his late partner's sister to investigate his death.

Zegen
(1987)Throughout the 1980s, Shohei Imamura (The Pornographers, Profound Desires of the Gods), a leading figure of the Japanese New Wave era of the 1960s, cemented his international reputation as one of the most important directors of his generation with a series of films that all competed at Cannes to great critical acclaim. Making its HD debut, Zegen (1987) takes a satirical look at Japan's pre-war colonial expansion through the unscrupulous eyes of its flesh-peddler antihero as he establishes a prostitution enterprise across Southeast Asia. This work epitomises the director's almost documentary style of filmmaking, exposing the vulgar yet vibrant and instinctive underbelly of Japanese society through a sympathetic focus on peasants, prostitutes, criminal lowlife and other marginalised figures to explore the schism between the country's timeless pre-modern traditions and the modern face it projects to the world.