"Seven Samurai" Village Theme Park
Posted: Mon Feb 16, 2004 15:34 -0700
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http://mdn.mainichi.co.jp/news/20040216 ... 9000c.html
Spirit of Kurosawa lives on in Seven Samurai village
The ancient villages that appeared in the film classics "Seven Samurai," "Rashomon" and "Yojinbo" by the late Akira Kurosawa will be rebuilt at a theme park in honor of the noted director.
Officials at Kurosawa Production said Monday that they plan to open both the Kurosawa Village in Akita Prefecture and Akira Kurosawa Cinema City in Tokyo's Adachi-ku in the spring of 2006.
The outdoor sets of Seven Samurai, Yojinbo and Rashomon, all of which feature the late Toshiro Mifune, will be re-constructed in the Kurosawa Village.
The Kurosawa Cinema City will regularly screen the director's works and hold lectures for those who want to study filmmaking. Former staff members who worked under Kurosawa will serve as lecturers.
"I want people who worked on the Kurosawa movies to hand down their movie-making techniques while they are alive to younger generations," said the director's son Hisao Kurosawa, president of Kurosawa Production. (Mainichi Shimbun, Japan, Feb. 16, 2004)

http://mdn.mainichi.co.jp/news/20040216 ... 9000c.html
Spirit of Kurosawa lives on in Seven Samurai village
The ancient villages that appeared in the film classics "Seven Samurai," "Rashomon" and "Yojinbo" by the late Akira Kurosawa will be rebuilt at a theme park in honor of the noted director.
Officials at Kurosawa Production said Monday that they plan to open both the Kurosawa Village in Akita Prefecture and Akira Kurosawa Cinema City in Tokyo's Adachi-ku in the spring of 2006.
The outdoor sets of Seven Samurai, Yojinbo and Rashomon, all of which feature the late Toshiro Mifune, will be re-constructed in the Kurosawa Village.
The Kurosawa Cinema City will regularly screen the director's works and hold lectures for those who want to study filmmaking. Former staff members who worked under Kurosawa will serve as lecturers.
"I want people who worked on the Kurosawa movies to hand down their movie-making techniques while they are alive to younger generations," said the director's son Hisao Kurosawa, president of Kurosawa Production. (Mainichi Shimbun, Japan, Feb. 16, 2004)