Kento Yamazaki (山﨑賢人, Yamazaki Kento, born September 7, 1994) is a Japanese actor and model.[1][2] He is best known for his roles in the films L DK (2014), No Longer Heroine (2015), Orange (2015), and Kingdom (2019), as well as the TV shows Death Note (2015), Kiss That Kills (2018), Good Doctor (2018), and the Netflix series Alice in Borderland (2020–present). He is under the Japanese talent agency Stardust Promotion.[3]
Kento Yamazaki | |
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山﨑賢人 | |
Born | Kento Yamazaki September 7, 1994 Itabashi, Tokyo, Japan |
Occupations |
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Years active | 2010–present |
Agent | Stardust Promotion |
Website | Kento Yamazaki |
Kento Yamazaki was born in Tokyo to a middle-class family. He lives with his father, mother and older brother. As an avid fan of football, he played the sport from 2nd grade until his 3rd year in middle school. He also had dreams of becoming a soccer player or a coach of the national team. His first modelling offer came during his third year of junior high school when he was scouted by his current agency at Takeshita Dori (Harajuku) while on his way home after a soccer match. He worked as a model for the magazine Pichi Lemon from 2009 to 2011,[1][2] before making his debut in acting.[3]
Yamazaki made his acting debut in 2010 when he was cast in the TV series Atami no Sousakan as a mysterious high school student. That was followed by a supporting role in TV series Clone Baby, where he played a hacker.
Yamazaki's first movie was Control Tower which was released in April 2011.[4] He sang and played the guitar in the movie, and his acting was well received. The next year, he appeared in The Wings of the Kirin (2012) and as the lead in the horror thriller film Another, working with Control Tower co-star Ai Hashimoto for the second time. He was later cast in the following films: The Chasing World 3[5] and Live action of Love for Beginners. In 2013, he led a film with an LGBT theme, Sato Family Breakfast, which aired on television. He also participated in the 2nd Taiwan International Queer Film Festival in 2015. Besides that, he took on a supporting role in the film JINX!!! and the TV series 35-sai no Koukousei. In 2014, he starred in a film based on the highly successful manga of the same name, L DK alongside Ayame Goriki.[6] The film was a breakthrough in his career which garnered him greater public attention. In the same year, he acted in three drama series, including Baseball Brainiacs, where he was cast with actors Sota Fukushi and Yuto Nakajima.[7] He also made his stage debut as main lead Inuzuka Shino in Satomi Hakkenden.
In 2015, he was again cast in a film adaptation of a popular manga titled Heroine Shikkaku alongside Mirei Kiritani.[8] He also played the lead role in Orange alongside Tao Tsuchiya.[9] The film was a great success, grossing almost US$28 million and becoming the 9th-highest-grossing Japanese films of 2016.[10][11][12] From those two films, he won the 39th Japan Academy Prize for Newcomers of the Year and was also nominated at the 2016 Hochi Film Awards. That same year, he appeared in the television adaptation of the famous manga Death Note as L, and the NHK Asadora Mare, which was led by the aforementioned Tsuchiya Tao.
In 2016, Yamazaki was cast in Your Lie in April where he played the role of Kosei Arima, a gifted pianist, alongside Suzu Hirose, who portrayed Kaori Miyazono.[13] For this role, Yamazaki had to learn the piano and practiced for six months before the filming started.[14] Thereafter, he was cast in the live action adaptation of Wolf Girl and Black Prince and the TV series A Girl & Three Sweethearts. Yamazaki was also chosen to star in a special short film to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Yasuhisa Hara's historical manga Kingdom[15] as the main character, Shin. He reprised his role in the live action feature film that was released on April 19, 2019.[16] In 2017, he co-starred with Haruna Kawaguchi in One Week Friends.[17] The film received positive ratings from critics, which mostly praised Yamazaki for successfully portraying the cheerful and friendly Yuki Hase. Afterwards, he appeared in a few more live action movies: JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable Chapter I, Psychic Kusuo: The Disastrous Life of Saiki K. and Hyouka: Forbidden Secrets. Towards the end of 2017, he starred in the TV series Rikuoh.[18]
In January 2018, Yamazaki played the lead role of a top nightclub host for the NTV winter drama Kiss that Kills, his first lead role in a drama,[19] which also starred Mugi Kadowaki, Mackenyu and Masaki Suda. His film A Forest of Wool and Steel was released too, where he portrayed a piano tuner.[20] For preparation, Yamazaki lived in Hokkaido to learn and practice piano tuning. The Emperor and Empress of Japan attended a special screening of the film and met with the cast.[21][22] In the summer of 2018, Yamazaki was cast in the TV series Good Doctor.[23] Based on the 2013 Korean drama of the same name, it tells the story of a young autistic man who becomes a pediatric surgeon. The drama received a positive response from viewers, and it was the first time he acted as a doctor and took on a more unconventional role. It earned him the Television Drama Academy Award for Best Actor.[24][25][26]
In 2020, Yamazaki went on to star in the live action film of Wotakoi: Love is Hard for Otaku. The film was released in February 2020. He played the lead role of Hirotaka Nifuji, an aloof working adult who is a huge fan of video games and the love interest of Narumi Momose, who was played by Mitsuki Takahata. He also starred in Theater: a Love Story as a struggling theater director.[27]
In 2021, he starred in the sci-fi drama film The Door into Summer, loosely based on the novel of the same name. The following year of 2021 found him reprising his role as Li Xin in Kingdom 2: Far and Away. His latest work is the lead role of the drama TV series Atom’s Last Shot as an indie game developer. [28][29][30]
He is currently well known for his leading role as Ryohei Arisu in Netflix's adaptation of Alice in Borderland.[31]
Kingdom 3: Flame of Destiny was set to be released on July 28.
Year | Title | Role | Network | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | Atami no Sousakan | Shinya Shijima | TV Asahi | [32] | |
Clone Baby | Jōtarō Okabe | TBS | [33] | ||
2011 | Runaways: For Your Love | Panda | TBS | [34] | |
2012 | Miss Double Faced Teacher | Shunsuke Yasuda | TBS | [35] | |
2013 | No Dropping Out: Back to School at 35 | Ryo Akutsu | NTV | [36] | |
Sato Family's Breakfast, Suzuki Family's Dinner | Takumi Sato | BS Japan | TV movie | [37] | |
2014 | Team Batista 4: Raden Meikyu | Aoi Sakuranomiya | Fuji TV | [38] | |
Water Polo Yankees | Ryuji Mifune | Fuji TV | [39] | ||
Baseball Brainiacs | Kōki Ebato | NTV | [40] | ||
2015 | Mare | Keita Kontani | NHK | Asadora | [41] |
Eternal Us Sea Side Blue | Taku Nagata | NTV | TV movie | [42] | |
Death Note | L | NTV | [43] | ||
2016 | A Girl & Three Sweethearts | Kanata Shibasaki | Fuji TV | [44] | |
2017 | Rikuoh | Daichi Miyazawa | TBS | [45] | |
2018 | Kiss that Kills | Ōtarō Dōjima | NTV | Lead role | [46] |
Good Doctor | Minato Shindō | Fuji TV | Lead role | [47] | |
From Today, It's My Turn!! | Katori | NTV | Episode 10; cameo | [48] | |
2019 | Time Limit Investigator 2019 | Shota Amaya | TV Asahi | Episode 8 | [49] |
2020 | Only I Am 17 Years Old | [Passer-by] | Abema TV | Episode 4; cameo | [50] |
2020–present | Alice in Borderland | Ryōhei Arisu | Netflix | Lead role; 3 seasons | [31] |
2022 | Atom's Last Shot | Nayuta Azumi | TBS | Lead role | [30] |
2024 | Golden Kamuy: Hokkaido Tattooed Prisoners Scramble Arc | Saichi Sugimoto | Wowow | Lead role | [51] |
Year | Title | Role | Director | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Control Tower | Kakeru | Takahiro Miki | Lead role | [52] |
2012 | The Wings of the Kirin | Tatsuya Sugino | Nobuhiro Doi | [52] | |
Another | Kōichi Sakakibara | Takeshi Furusawa | Lead role | [53] | |
The Chasing World 3 | Suguru | Mari Asato | Lead role | [52] | |
The Chasing World 5 | Suguru | Mari Asato | [54] | ||
Love for Beginners | Nishiki Hasegawa | Takeshi Furusawa | [52] | ||
2013 | Jinx!!! | Yūsuke Nomura | Naoto Kumazawa | [52] | |
2014 | L DK | Shūsei Kugayama | Taisuke Kawamura | Lead role | [55] |
2015 | No Longer Heroine | Rita Terasaka | Tsutomu Hanabusa | [56] | |
Orange | Kakeru Naruse | Kōjirō Hashimoto | Lead role | [52] | |
2016 | Your Lie in April | Kōsei Arima | Takehiko Shinjō | Lead role | [52] |
Wolf Girl and Black Prince | Kyōya Sata | Ryūichi Hiroki | Lead role | [52] | |
Yo-Kai Watch The Movie 3: A Whale of Two Worlds | King Enma | Shinji Ushiro | [52] | ||
2017 | One Week Friends | Yūki Hase | Shōsuke Murakami | Lead role | [52] |
Poetry Angel | [Man attending at briefing session] | Toshimitsu Iizuka | Cameo | [57] | |
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable Chapter I | Jōsuke Higashikata | Takashi Miike | Lead role | [58] | |
Psychic Kusuo: The Disastrous Life of Saiki K. | Kusuo Saiki | Yūichi Fukuda | Lead role | [52] | |
Hyouka: Forbidden Secrets | Hōtarō Oreki | Mari Asato | Lead role | [52] | |
2018 | A Forest of Wool and Steel | Naoki Tomura | Kōjirō Hashimoto | Lead role | [52] |
2019 | Kingdom | Xin | Shinsuke Sato | Lead role | [59] |
NiNoKuni | Yū (voice) | Yoshiyuki Momose | Lead role | [60] | |
2020 | Wotakoi: Love is Hard for Otaku | Hirotaka Nifuji | Yūichi Fukuda | Lead role | [52] |
Theatre: A Love Story | Nagata | Isao Yukisada | Lead role | [27] | |
Crazy Samurai Musashi | Chūsuke | Yūji Shimomura | [61] | ||
2021 | The Door into Summer | Sōichirō Takakura | Takahiro Miki | Lead role | [28] |
2022 | Kingdom 2: Far and Away | Xin | Shinsuke Sato | Lead role | [29] |
2023 | Kingdom 3: The Flame of Destiny | Xin | Shinsuke Sato | Lead role | [62] |
2024 | Golden Kamuy | Saichi Sugimoto | Shigeaki Kubo | Lead role | [63] |
The Yin Yang Master 0 | Abe no Seimei | Shimako Satō | Lead role | [64] | |
Kingdom 4: The Return of the Great General | Xin | Shinsuke Sato | Lead role | [65] |
Year | Song | Artist | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
2011 | Ressha | Karasu | [66] |
2018 | Sayonara Elegy | Masaki Suda | [67] |
Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | 39th Japan Academy Film Prize | Newcomer of the Year | Orange and No Longer Heroine | Won | [74] |
41st Hochi Film Award | Best New Artist | Nominated | |||
2018 | 96th Television Drama Academy Awards | Best Actor | Kiss that Kills | Nominated | [75] |
98th Television Drama Academy Awards | Best Actor | Good Doctor | Won | [76] | |
Beijing IQiyi Scream Night Award | Asian Newcomer of The Year | Good Doctor, Kiss That Kills | Won | [77] | |
2020 | Forbes Asia 100 Digital Stars | Himself | Placed | [78] |