I just came across this on The Japan Today website (the movie he's in sounds interesting):
Japanese teen, 14, wins best actor award at Cannes
Sunday, May 23, 2004 at 06:00 JST
Yuya Yagira IMAGE.NETCANNES Yuya Yagira, a 14-year-old Japanese boy, was a surprise winner of the best actor award at the 57th Cannes Film Festival on Saturday night for his performance in "Nobody Knows."
He is the first Japanese to win the best actor award at the Cannes Film Festival.
The film, which is directed by Hirokazu Koreeda, had its world premiere at Cannes before release in Japan in July. It is based on a real-life story from 1988 in which four children born of different fathers who never went to school were abandoned by their mother and left to fend for themselves.
When tragedy struck, not a single resident in the building was aware of their existence.
"For 15 years I never stopped thinking about this," Koreeda said. "I wanted to show children surrounded by irresponsible adults. The oldest, who is 12, is the only person in the story to show a sense of responsibility right up until the end. This touched me."
The youngster, who was not at the ceremony as he had to fly home for exams, plays the oldest of the four children, who are aged between four and 12 in the film.
The youngster won ahead of several adults widely expected to scoop the prize, Australia's Geoffrey Rush, the star of "The Life and Death of Peter Sellers," or young Mexican newcomer Gael Garcia Bernal, who plays Ernesto "Che" Guevara in "The Motorcycle Diaries."
The Palme d'Or best film award went to American director Michael Moore's documentary "Fahrenheit 9/11" about a critical look at the administration of President George Bush after the Sept 11, 2001, attacks on the United States. (Wire reports)
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