In a tribute that’s as overdue as it is fitting, the 38th Tokyo International Film Festival will present its Lifetime Achievement Award to filmmaker Yoji Yamada, whose extraordinary career has spanned more than six decades and nearly the entire postwar evolution of Japanese cinema.
Yamada made his directorial debut in 1961 with the domestic drama Nikai no Tanin and has since gone on to helm 91 films — from intimate portraits of ordinary Japanese life to sweeping period dramas that revitalized the jidaigeki form. His beloved Tora-san series, about a lovelorn traveling salesman (Tora-san, Our Lovable Tramp) — 50 films released between 1969 and 1995 — became a national institution and remains recognized by Guinness World Records as the longest-running film series starring the same actor.
From the gentle domestic realism of The Yellow Handkerchief and Home from the Sea in the 1970s to his late-career masterpieces The Twilight Samurai (2002) and The Hidden Blade (2004), Yamada’s great theme has been the humor, dignity and quiet endurance of Japanese life through changing times. He has remained a relentless chronicler of the country’s moral and emotional landscape across the golden age of Shochiku Studios, Japan’s modern indie renaissance, and the emergence of the global arthouse circuit. Now 93, Yamada remains tirelessly at work: his latest feature, Tokyo Taxi — a remake of the French drama Driving Madeleine — will screen as the festival’s centerpiece title before its national release on Nov. 21.
“Yoji Yamada has long observed the realities of Japanese society with a discerning yet compassionate eye, crystallizing them into numerous cinematic masterpieces,” said Tokyo festival chairman Hiroyasu Ando, praising the director’s “profound love of cinema” and “deep commitment to the future of the medium.”
Yamada is playing several other roles at the 2025 Tokyo International Film Festival as well. He chaired the event’s Kurosawa Akira Award jury, which will present Oscar-winning filmmaker Chloé Zhao and Japanese director Lee Sang-il with the prestigious prize. He will also take part in a masterclass discussion with Lee on Oct. 30 during the TIFF Lounge talk series, organized by Hirokazu Kore-eda.
Across the decades, Yamada has received numerous other honors in Japan, including the Minister of Education Award for Fine Arts and the Mainichi Art Award (1970); the Kikuchi Kan Prize (1972); the Medal with Purple Ribbon and the Asahi Prize (1996); the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette (2002); recognition as a Person of Cultural Merit (2004); membership in the Japan Art Academy (2008); the Order of Culture (2012); and designation as an Honorary Citizen of Tokyo in 2014.
The 38th Tokyo International Film Festival runs Oct. 27 to Nov. 5.
AloJapan.com