Oppai Volleyball
Oppai Volleyball | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Japanese name | |||||
Kanji | おっぱいバレー | ||||
| |||||
Directed by | Eiichirō Hasumi | ||||
Written by | Yoshikazu Okada Munenori Mizuno | ||||
Produced by | Toru Horikoshi Ryuhei Chiba Shuji Abe Shigeyuki Endo Yoshitaka Hori Shinichiro Nishigaki Fumihiro Hirai | ||||
Starring |
| ||||
Cinematography | Hiromitsu Nishimura | ||||
Production company | Warner Bros. | ||||
Distributed by | Toei Company | ||||
Release date |
| ||||
Running time | 102 minutes | ||||
Country | Japan | ||||
Language | Japanese |
Oppai Volleyball (おっぱいバレー, Oppai Barē) is a 2009 Japanese Comedy film directed by Eiichirō Hasumi. It was released in Japan on 18 April. The film stars Haruka Ayase as Mikako Terajima, the lead actress; Suzuka Ohgo as Mikako (Young); Munetaka Aoki as Kenji Horiuchi; Tōru Nakamura as Kazue Shiro; Hiromasa Taguchi as Ryuo (Volleyball Coach); Takuya Ishida as Volleyball senior; Ken Mitsuishi as head coach. The film was produced by Warner Bros. studios and distributed by Toei Company.[1][2]
Reception
Haruka Ayase won the 52nd Blue Ribbon Awards for Best Actress for her role in the film.[3] Ian Bartholomew from Taipei Times said that despite having an erotic name the Oppai Volleyball is an innocuous piece of inconsequential fluff with no aspirations to be anything else.[4]
References
External links
- Oppai Volleyball at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- Umizaru (2004)
- Limit of Love: Umizaru (2006)
- Oppai Volleyball (2009)
- Umizaru 3: The Last Message (2010)
- Wild 7 (2011)
- Brave Hearts: Umizaru (2012)
- Assassination Classroom (2015)
- Mozu (2015)
- Assassination Classroom: Graduation (2016)
- Over Drive (2018)
- Resident Evil: Death Island (2023)