Tokyo International Film Festival will present its Lifetime Achievement Award to director Yoji Yamada at the event’s 38th edition, recognizing a career that spans more than six decades and 91 features, including the long-running Tora-san series. Festival organizers said Yamada’s films, rooted in everyday Japanese life, have made a lasting contribution to cinema at home and abroad.
In a statement, festival chairman Hiroyasu Ando praised Yamada’s “discerning yet compassionate eye” and noted his support for younger filmmakers and recent service as chair of the Kurosawa Akira Award jury. The award coincides with the selection of Yamada’s new film, Tokyo Taxi, as this year’s Centerpiece presentation ahead of its domestic release on November 21, positioning the 93-year-old filmmaker both as an honoree and an active participant in the program.
This year’s festival runs October 27 to November 5 across venues in central Tokyo. Organizers previously announced that actress Sayuri Yoshinaga would also receive a Lifetime Achievement Award, continuing a tradition of honoring figures whose work has shaped Japanese filmmaking. The updates arrive alongside a broader slate that includes special events and industry programs tied to the market.
Yamada’s body of work has earned major domestic recognition over the decades and international festival attention for titles such as The Twilight Samurai and The Hidden Blade, emblematic of his shift into period drama in the 2000s after establishing a national audience with contemporary stories. Past interviews have underscored his interest in character-centered narratives and a humane outlook that resists spectacle, traits that help explain his standing with both viewers and peers. The Hollywood Reporter first detailed the latest honor as the festival opened its week of premieres and tributes.















































