Tokyo Park
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Tokyo Park
Summary
Tokyo Park is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (9 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Tokyo Park's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Tokyo Park was directed by Shinji Aoyama[4].
- Shinji Aoyama wrote the screenplay for Tokyo Park[5].
- Yukiya Shōji wrote the screenplay for Tokyo Park[6].
- Tokyo Park's composer is recorded as Isao Yamada[7].
- Tokyo Park's composer is recorded as Shinji Aoyama[8].
- Tokyo Park's genre is drama film[9].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Haruma Miura[10].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Nana Eikura[11].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Manami Konishi[12].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Haruka Igawa[13].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Takashi Ukaji[14].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Shōta Sometani[15].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Tamae Andō[16].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Takashi Kobayashi[17].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Masahiko Shimada[18].
- A cast member of Tokyo Park was Saki Matsuda[19].
- The original language of Tokyo Park was Japanese[20].
- Tokyo Park's color is recorded as color[21].
- Tokyo Park's country of origin is recorded as Japan[22].
- Tokyo Park was published on June 18, 2011[23].
- Tokyo Park's distributed by is recorded as Hakuhodo DY Music & Pictures[24].
- Tokyo Park's narrative location is recorded as Tokyo[25].
- Tokyo Park's official website is recorded as http://tokyo-park.jp/[26].
- Tokyo Park's title is recorded as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': '東京公園'}[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Tokyo Park was directed by Shinji Aoyama[4]. Screenwriters include Shinji Aoyama[5] and Yukiya Shōji[6]. Cast members include Haruma Miura[10], Nana Eikura[11], Manami Konishi[12], Haruka Igawa[13], Takashi Ukaji[14], and Shōta Sometani[15].
Publication
Tokyo Park was released on June 18, 2011[23]. The original language of it was Japanese[20]. Its genre is drama film[9].
Why It Matters
Tokyo Park ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (9 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]