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Atsuki Sato

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Atsuki Satō
佐藤 敦紀
Born1961[1]
Other namesAtsunori Satō
Alma materWaseda University
Occupations
  • Film director
  • visual effects supervisor
  • special effects director
  • film editor
Years active1982–present

Atsuki Satō (佐藤 敦紀あつき, Satō Atsuki, born 1961),[1][2] sometimes erroneously identified in English as Atsunori Satō, is a Japanese film director, visual effects supervisor, special effects director, and film editor. He won the award for Best Film Editing at the 40th Japan Academy Prize for his work on Hideaki Anno and Shinji Higuchi's Shin Godzilla and was nominated for the Best Visual Effects accolade at the 16th Asian Film Awards for his work on Higuchi's Shin Ultraman.

Life and career

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Satō was born in 1961[2][3] in Toyohashi, Aichi, Japan.[1][4] Satō lived in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan until the age of six.[4] Satō stated that during his formative years, he indulged in biology and "always carried an illustrated insect book with me everywhere I went".[4] His family often moved prefectures during his childhood because father worked for the Japanese National Railways.[1] While he was in middle school, he enjoyed playing music and often rehearsed Beethoven's sonatas.[1] In his third year of secondary school, he aimed to study music at a university's education department.[1] However, Satō became interested in anime around the same time after watching Mobile Suit Gundamwhich was airing during his third year of secondary school— and thus began to consider working on anime in Tokyo.[1]

Since he could not get a career in anime in Tokyo immediately, Satō enrolled at Waseda University in 1980.[1] He had the opportunity to attend Nihon University College of Art or Meiji University but instead choose to enter Waseda's night school, the Second Literature Department.[1]

Satō started his career in anime in 1982, working at Studio Deen. He worked on the Urusei Yatsura anime and the second Perman anime where he was in charge of directing production assistants.[1] In 1985, after working on Urusei Yatsura 3: Remember My Love, he left the anime industry and began a new job at a business in Nagoya.[1] Shortly thereafter, Satō became interested in computer-generated imagery and studied it at a business school while temporary working at a post-production studio in Tokyo.[1]

In 1988, Satō was employed by IMAGICA Lab. Inc. and worked in the company's special effects department. He remained in the department until 1992, when he became self-employed.[1] Two years later (in 1994), he worked with his friend Shinji Higuchi, who meet Satō during his time at IMAGICA, on Gamera: Guardian of the Universe. Satō subsequently worked on the next two entries in the Gamera trilogy, creating the computer-generated missiles.[1] Upon the completion of Gamera 2: Attack of Legion (1996), Satō began work on The Record of Garm War, a project that would eventually become Garm Wars: The Last Druid (2014), however, production on the project was halted in 1999.[1] Thus, he and other crew members from The Record of Garm War moved to work on Gamera 3: Revenge of Iris (1999). Thereafter, he was employed by IMAGE Co., Ltd., working in their visual effects division Motor/lieZ.[1]

In 2001, he worked on the digital effects for The Princess Blade and was created as the Digital/CG supervisor on Shusuke Kaneko's Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack.[5] The following year he worked on the visual effects of Kamen Rider Ryuki: Episode Final and Returner and edited the film Minimoni ja Movie: Okashi na Daibōken!.[5] He would supervise the visual effects on Kamen Rider 555: Paradise Lost in 2003, and was credited under "others" in the films HAZAN and Kamen Rider Blade: Missing Ace in 2004.[5] Two years later, he received a credit as the supervisor of visual effects for Motor/lieZ on She, the Ultimate Weapon.[5] In 2009, he served as both the editor and visual effects creator for Mamoru Oshii's Assault Girls.[6]

In 2012, he edited Kenji Kamiyama's anime film 009 Re:Cyborg.[6] That same year, Satō reunited with his friend Higuchi on the films The Floating Castle and Giant God Warrior Appears in Tokyo, serving as visual effects supervisor for both films and editor on the latter. In 2013, he founded the visual effects studio TMA1.[1] Two years later, he was credited as the editor on Oshii's Nowhere Girl and served as the visual effects supervisor on Higuchi's Attack on Titan.[6] In 2016, Oshii's Garm Wars was released for which Satō served as the assistant director and won the award for Best Film Editing at the 40th Japan Academy Prize for his work as the editor on Hideaki Anno and Higuchi's Shin Godzilla.[1][7]

In 2021, Satō made his directorial debut on the anime film The "Space Battleship Yamato" Era: The Choice in 2202.[6] The following year, he was credited as visual effects supervisor on Higuchi's Shin Ultraman,[6] for his work, Satō has been nominated for the Best Visual Effects award at the 16th Asian Film Awards.[8] He has the same role in visual effects for Anno's Shin Kamen Rider, to be released in March 2023.[6]

Filmography

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Film

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Year Film Effects Editor Note(s) Ref(s)
1985 Urusei Yatsura 3: Remember My Love Unknown Unknown [1]
1995 Gamera: Guardian of the Universe CG missiles creator No [1]
Ghost in the Shell Unknown position in CG [7]
1996 Gamera 2: Attack of Legion CG missiles creator [1]
Space Cargo Ship Remnant 6 Special effects director With Shinji Higuchi [5]
1999 Gamera 3: Revenge of Iris CG missiles creator [1]
2000 Sakuya Visual effects [5]
2001 Avalon Unknown Unknown [7]
The Princess Blade Digital effects No [5]
Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah:
Giant Monsters All-Out Attack
Digital/CG supervisor [5]
2002 Kamen Rider Ryuki: Episode Final Visual effects director [5]
Returner Visual effects [5]
Minimoni ja Movie: Okashi na Daibōken! No Yes [5]
2003 Kamen Rider 555: Paradise Lost Visual effects supervisor No [5]
2004 HAZAN Unknown Unknown Credited under "others" [5]
Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence [7]
Kamen Rider Blade: Missing Ace Credited under "others" [5]
2006 She, the Ultimate Weapon Visual effects supervisor No Credited under Motor/lieZ [5]
2009 Assault Girls Visual effects Yes [6]
2010 Halo Legends Unknown Unknown [7]
2012 009 Re:Cyborg No Yes [6]
The Floating Castle Visual effects supervisor No [6]
Giant God Warrior Appears in Tokyo Yes [6]
2015 Nowhere Girl No [6]
Attack on Titan Visual effects supervisor No [6]
2016 Garm Wars No Assistant director [6]
Shin Godzilla Visual effects supervisor Yes [6]
2021 The "Space Battleship Yamato" Era:
The Choice in 2202
No No Director [6]
2022 Shin Ultraman Visual effects supervisor [6]
2023 Shin Kamen Rider [6]

Television

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Year(s) Series Production assistant director Note(s) Ref(s)
1981–1986 Urusei Yatsura Yes Began working on the series in 1982 [1]
1983–1985 Perman [1]

Accolades

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Award Work(s) Category Note(s) Result Ref(s)
40th Japan Academy Film Prize Shin Godzilla Best Film Editing With Hideaki Anno Won [1][7]
16th Asian Film Awards Shin Ultraman Best Visual Effects Nominated [8]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z "映像編集者のリアル 第6回 ─ 佐藤敦紀[後編]". VIDEO SALON (in Japanese). March 8, 2018. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  2. ^ a b "佐藤敦紀". Eiga.com (in Japanese). Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  3. ^ "iPhoneで撮影、Premiere Proでリアルタイム編集環境を構築 - 型破りな『シン・ゴジラ』制作ワークフロー (1)". TECH+ (in Japanese). September 3, 2016. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Barder, Ollie (October 6, 2016). "Atsuki Sato On Editing The Japanese Box Office Hit Godzilla Resurgence". Forbes. Archived from the original on January 30, 2023. Retrieved January 29, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "佐藤敦紀 : 関連作品(映画) (2)". Eiga.com (in Japanese). Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "佐藤敦紀 : 関連作品(映画)". Eiga.com (in Japanese). Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Japan Academy Prize Official Website". Japan Academy Film Prize. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  8. ^ a b "Ponniyin Selvan scores six nominations at 16th Asian Film Awards, leads SS Rajamouli's RRR". The Indian Express. 7 January 2023. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
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