Kentarô Yuasa
Kentarô Yuasa is credited as a fight choreographer for two films in the Japanese cinema of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The first record of their work appears in 1969 with Goyokin, a period drama directed by Hideo Gosha, where Yuasa contributed to the film’s action sequences.
Biography
Kentarô Yuasa is credited as a fight choreographer for two films in the Japanese cinema of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The first record of their work appears in 1969 with Goyokin, a period drama directed by Hideo Gosha, where Yuasa contributed to the film’s action sequences. Their involvement in fight choreography continued in 1971 with Inn of Evil, another film by Hideo Gosha, further establishing their role in shaping the physical confrontations within these productions.
The scope of their contributions is limited to these two credits, both of which fall under the action-oriented genre. Their work would have involved coordinating stunt performers, designing fight scenes, and ensuring the practical execution of violence or combat within the narrative framework of each film. Beyond th…




