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Motoyoshi Oda | |
|---|---|
Oda in 1954 | |
| Born | (1909-07-21)21 July 1909 Moji, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka, Japan |
| Died | 21 October 1973(1973-10-21) (aged 64) Tokyo, Japan |
| Occupation | Film director |
| Years active | 1936–1958 |
Motoyoshi Oda (小田 基義,Oda Motoyoshi; 21 July 1909 – 21 October 1973)[a] was a Japanese filmmaker who directed over 50 films in his career.[2]
An English major who graduated fromWaseda University in 1935, Motoyoshi Oda was accepted into the directors' program at Tokyo's P.C.L. (Photo Chemical Laboratories, a film company later incorporated intoToho Studios).[2]
He studied under directorKajiro Yamamoto, along with future directorsAkira Kurosawa,Ishirō Honda, andSenkichi Taniguchi. When the latter two trainees were drafted into WW2, Oda found his career accelerated. He was promoted to director in 1940 withSong of Kunya. Toho kept Oda working as a director of trivial films that had to be made in order to keep product flowing into the theaters, but which offered little time or room for artistic achievement. His most well-known credits areLady from Hell (1949),Tomei Ningen a 1954 Japanese horror inspired byThe Invisible Man, a follow-up to his earlier 1954 filmGhost Man.
The only film he made ever to be shown outside Japan was the secondGodzilla film,Godzilla Raids Again (1955), released in the United States asGigantis, the Fire Monster. Toho insisted that Oda direct as many as seven movies a year, knowing that he could be trusted to deliver them on time. He was by all accounts a popular director with his staff, who affectionately called him "Odabutsu-san" (オダブツさん).
Over his entire career, Motoyoshi Oda directed fifty movies, in addition to his work as assistant director and second-unit direction on Ishiro Honda'sEagle of the Pacific (1953).
After directing theOtora-san series in Toei in 1958, he went on to television drama direction. He died at the age of 64.