
I Am Waiting
俺は待ってるぜ

Tomio Aoki (October 7, 1923 in Yokohama, Japan – January 24, 2004 in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan) aka Tokkan Kozō was a Japanese film actor. Aoki became famous as a child actor after debuting at the age of six in silent films directed by Yasujirō Ozu. His leading role in Ozu's 1929 short comedy Tokkan kozo gave Aoki his nickname. I Was Born, But... (1932), Passing Fancy (1933) and An Inn in Tokyo (1935) were three other Ozu films in which Aoki had notable roles. Aoki disappeared from Japanese cinema in 1940, at the age of 16, but returned to film acting in Kon Ichikawa's The Burmese Harp (1956). During the 1960s he appeared in films for directors Seijun Suzuki and Teruo Ishii before retiring again in 1972. He again returned to the screen in 1995 in Makoto Shinozaki's Okaeri, and appeared in Suzuki's Pistol Opera (2001). He continued appearing in films, and in short comedies by Shinozaki until his death in 2004. He shared the Best Actor award at the French Three Continents Festival with two of his co-stars for Shinozaki's Not Forgotten (2000). By the time of his death, at the age of 80, Aoki had performed in over 300 films. Description above from the Wikipedia article Tomio Aoki, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Born: 1923-10-07 in Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan

俺は待ってるぜ

峠を渡る若い風

ビルマの竪琴

波涛を越える渡り鳥

完全な遊戯

暗黒街の美女

ある脅迫

俺たちの血が許さない

夜の牙

狂った脱獄

豚と軍艦

百万弗を叩き出せ

潮騒

骨まで愛して

俺の故郷は大西部

ひとり旅
青空 に なく

花形選手

幕末太陽傳

青春前期 青い果実