Yoshimitsu Morita was a Japanese film director. Self-taught, first making shorts on 8 mm film during the 1970s, he made his feature film debut with No Yōna Mono (Something Like It, 1981).
In 1983 he won acclaim for his movie Kazoku Gēmu ("The Family Game"), which was voted the best film of the year by Japanese critics in the Kinema Junpo magazine poll. This black comedy dealt with then-recent changes in the structure of Japanese home life. It also earned Morita the Directors Guild of Japan New Directors Award. He also won the award for best director at the 21st Yokohama Film Festival for 39 keihō dai sanjūkyū jō ("Keiho", 2003) and the award for best screenplay at the 18th Yokohama Film Festival for Haru (1996).
Directing
69
Male
1950-01-25
Chigasaki, Kanagawa, Japan
Morita Yoshimitsu
Tokyo Fair Weather
SOUL RED Yusaku Matsuda
Sleepless Town
Crying Out Love in the Center of the World
Lost Paradise
The Black House
South Bound
Abacus and Sword
Like Asura
The Weather Report
Industrial Area
Something Like It
Copycat Killer
And Then
The Family Game
The Mamiya Brothers
Bakayaro! I'm Plenty Mad
For Business
Pink Cut: Love Me Hard, Love Me Deep
Haru
Tsubaki Sanjuro
Train Brain Express
Top Stripper
Keiho
Main Theme
Live in Chigasaki
It's On Me
24 Hour Playboy
Kitchen
Love and Action in Osaka
Come On Girls!
Deaths in Tokimeki
Future Memories: Last Christmas
Bakayarō! 2: I Want to Be Happy
Umineko - Inseparable
A Desirable Marriage
The Steam Express
I Don't Have a License!
Bakayarô! 3: Weird Bunch