-
US says China chip policies unfair but will delay tariffs to 2027
-
Stranger Things set for final bow: five things to know
-
Grief, trauma weigh on survivors of catastrophic Hong Kong fire
-
Asian markets mixed after US growth data fuels Wall St record
-
Stokes says England player welfare his main priority
-
Australia's Lyon determined to bounce back after surgery
-
Stokes says England players' welfare his main priority
-
North Korean POWs in Ukraine seeking 'new life' in South
-
Japanese golf star 'Jumbo' Ozaki dies aged 78
-
Johnson, Castle shine as Spurs rout Thunder
-
Thai border clashes hit tourism at Cambodia's Angkor temples
-
From predator to plate: Japan bear crisis sparks culinary craze
-
Asian markets mostly up after US growth fuels Wall St record
-
'Happy milestone': Pakistan's historic brewery cheers export licence
-
Chevron: the only foreign oil company left in Venezuela
-
US denies visas to EU ex-commissioner, four others over tech rules
-
Koepka leaves LIV Golf: official
-
US slams China policies on chips but will delay tariffs to 2027
-
Arsenal reach League Cup semis with shoot-out win over Palace
-
Contenders Senegal, Nigeria start Cup of Nations campaigns with wins
-
Tunisia ease past Uganda to win Cup of Nations opener
-
S&P 500 surges to record after strong US economic report
-
UK police say no action against Bob Vylan duo over Israel army chant
-
Libya's top military chief killed in plane crash in Turkey
-
Venezuela passes law to jail backers of US oil blockade
-
French parliament passes emergency budget extension
-
Trump in Epstein files: five takeaways from latest release
-
Wasteful Nigeria open AFCON campaign with narrow win over Tanzania
-
Ukraine retreats in east as Russian strikes kill three, hit energy
-
Macron meets French farmers in bid to defuse anger over trade deal
-
Ineos snap up Scotsman Onley
-
UK comedian Russell Brand faces new rape, assault charges: police
-
World is 'ready' for a woman at helm of UN: Chile's Bachelet tells AFP
-
Real Madrid's Endrick joins Lyon on loan
-
Latest Epstein files renew scrutiny of Britain's ex-prince Andrew
-
US consumer confidence tumbles in December
-
Norwegian biathlete Sivert Guttorm Bakken found dead in hotel
-
UK comedian Russell Brand faces two new rape, assault charges: police
-
Venezuela seeks to jail backers of US oil blockade
-
Norwegian biathlete Sivert Guttorm Bakken found dead
-
Wall Street stocks edge higher
-
Vietnam Communist Party endorses To Lam to stay in top job
-
US economic growth surges in 3rd quarter, highest rate in two years
-
Frank defends Van de Ven after Slot slams 'reckless' foul on Isak
-
Russian paramilitaries in CAR say take election threat 'extremely seriously'
-
Trump in the Epstein files: five takeaways from latest release
-
UK govt to relax farmers inheritance tax after protests
-
Pakistani firm wins auction for state airline PIA
-
Stocks slip on strong US growth data
-
DR Congo beat Benin to kick off Cup of Nations bid
Alain Delon: a 'god' in Japan
French movie star Alain Delon, who died Sunday aged 88, said that in Japan he was like a deity. It wasn't an exaggeration, local fans told AFP on Monday.
"In Japan I am a kind of a god," Delon told Figaro Magazine in 1986 on one of his many visits to Japan, when women fainted and crowds chased his limousine.
"People get real pleasure from touching me, caressing my hand, kissing my fingers," he told the magazine, reporting on fans showering him with gifts from red roses to statuettes.
Delon's breakthrough role in Japan was "Purple Noon" (1960) as the handsome, homicidal anti-hero for the original screen version of Patricia Highsmith's thriller "The Talented Mr Ripley".
Delon played an "ambitious roughneck who loved money, women, and was ready for anything," said Sahoko Hata, a film critic who worked in the Japanese movie industry at the time.
"This thirst symbolised that of Japanese youth at the time," Hata told AFP.
- Still in love -
Delon made the first of many visits to Japan in 1963 to promote his films, but also increasingly to appear in television variety shows and at society events.
His TV appearances frequently broke audience records and up until the mid-1970s he regularly topped rankings of the Japan's most popular celebrities.
"My friends in their 70s and 80s are still all madly in love with him. Even at 88, he looked great," Delon fan Seta, 74, told AFP on Monday.
"I used to think to myself: 'How is it possible for such an attractive person to exist in this world?'," the pensioner said in Tokyo.
"He was handsome, elegant and slightly mysterious," she said.
For Kaoru Fujita, a woman in her late 50s shopping in Tokyo with her daughter, Delon's name was "synonymous with 'the handsome man'."
"If I have to think of someone to compare him with, I would say George Clooney or Brad Pitt," she told AFP.
"But I don’t think there is anyone who is as so classically handsome as he was. As an actor he was one of a kind."
- Socks and cigarettes -
Delon gradually transformed himself into a sort of ambassador of French chic, becoming the face of Japanese fashion brand D'Urban and appearing in adverts for Mazda cars.
The "Alain Delon" brand was launched in 1978, mainly aimed at Japan and other Asian countries, selling accessories from watches and socks to cigarettes.
In the 1980s and 1990s, a Japanese tour operator even offered organised trips to Europe that featured a banquet in Paris in the presence of Delon himself.
Extra paid options included having the honour of presenting Delon with a bouquet or having a souvenir photo taken with him.
Delon had a "dark, sad, mysterious, ambitious side, but also a bit of a loser", Yoshi Yatabe, a former programmer of the Tokyo International Film Festival, told AFP in 2022.
"This dark side really appealed to Japanese viewers who tend to like losers. In kabuki theatre, for example, the audience sympathises with the weakest," he said.
"France and Europe were a very far away place for me, so I would always wonder where he came from," remembered pensioner Mikiko Tsuburaya, 71.
"I was still a child, not a grown up yet (when he was popular). I would look at him as someone living in another world," the pensioner said.
O.Ortiz--AT