Biography
					Eiji Tsuburaya ranks alongside Willis H. O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen  as one of the great visionary SFX masters of twentieth century fantasy  cinema. Best remembered as the amazing special effects genius behind the  "Godzilla" series of monster films commencing in 1954, he also  contributed effects to a host of other Japanase monster / fantasy /  science fiction / drama / propaganda films for over four decades.
Eiji  Tsuburaya had a keen interest in the cinema from a young age, and  legend has it that he acquired a second hand movie projector when he was  only ten years old, and pulled it apart and put it back together with  relative ease. He began work as a cinematographer in Kyoto around 1919,  and then enhanced his skills to include camera work throughout the  1920s, at which time his eye for detail was in high demand from many  studio's. Around 1938, he became head of Special Visual Techniques at  Toho Studios, and during the Second World War he was involved in the  production of several Japanaese propaganda films. He went freelance  after the war, and in 1954 he collaborated with director Ishirô Honda on the monster epic Gojira (1954) (aka "Godzilla"). The film was an enormous hit in Japan, and additional scenes were filmed with US actor Raymond Burr  and then inserted strategically to give the movie western appeal.  "Godzilla, King Of The Monsters" was then released in the USA to strong  box office takings, and Godzilla has since appeared in over two dozen  films spanning over fifty years, becoming a key cult icon of Japanese  culture!!
The incredibly talented Tsuburaya went on to be the SFX  director behind dozens of Japanese monster & science fiction  classics including _Sora no daikiju Radon (1956)_ (aka "Rodan") Bijo to ekitai ningen (1958) (aka "The H-Man") Densô ningen (1960) (aka "The Telegian"), Mosura (1961) (aka "Mothra") Kingu Kongu tai Gojira (1962) (aka "King Kong versus Godzilla"), Varan the Unbelievable (1962), Matango  (1963), _Furankenshutain tai chitei kaiju Baragon (1965)_ (aka  "Frankenstein Conquers the World"), and _Kaiju soshingeki (1968)_ (aka  "Destroy All Monsters" ). Tsuburaya had also established his own  production company in 1963 (Tsuburaya Productions), creators of the  highly popular "Ultraman" character, and subsequent TV shows and films.
On  January 25, 1970, while vacationing in Shizuoka Prefecture, Tsuburaya  suffered a sudden, fatal heart attack. His incredible film & SFX  production company is still active today under the guidance of his  grandson, Kazuo Tsuburaya.
															Birthday: 1901-07-07