As movie fans, our relationship with Araki's films often begins with Tokyo Hiwa.
This is a film poem dedicated to his deceased wife Yoko by Araki, directed by Naoto Takenaka and written by Araki Keisuke.
As Bjork once decided affectionately, Araki was always in love with his dead wife Yoko, and even if he didn't speak, everyone could feel the immense amount of love.

Outside of the film, Araki is Japan's most famous photographer, and his fascination with lust and nudity, the obscene snooping of Japanese sexual culture, and the crazy professorial way of creation have also created his controversial extraordinary life.
Araki Keisuke's nine best film history
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1 Rome Is Not Fortified by Roberto Rossellini
I was moved by the neorealism in which the characters are based on actual characters and whose stories are indistinguishable from the facts. - Araki Keisuke
2 "The Bike Thief" by Vittorio de Sica
In all real scenes, the role of children is played by non-professional actors, and teenagers are actors. This film is the catalyst for "Ayuki" (Araki's photographic masterpiece). - Araki Keisuke
3 The Book of Joan of Arc, Carl Theodore Dreier
Top images with no makeup and continuous close-up shots. - Araki Keisuke
4 "The Forgotten People" Luis Buñuel
The cruelty of the slum teenagers, the coldness of the movie. - Araki Keisuke
5 "Do As You Please" Jean-Luc Godard
Accidentally traveling to the cinema to see "Joan of Arc of The Lost", Anna Karina was moved to tears by a close-up of Fao Connhetti. This is Godard's love for Anna. - Araki Keisuke
6
"The Great Road" by Federico Fellini
The director's love for his wife, Julietta Massina. - Araki Keisuke
7 The Adventures by Michelangelo Antonioni
The ending without an ending is great. - Araki Keisuke
8 "Rashomon" Akira Kurosawa
Light shadow. Kyo Machiko. INTERVIEWER ARAKI Nobuyoshi
9, Rain and Moon, Kenji Makiguchi
Non-illusory reality. - Araki Keisuke