While living in the United States, Ogigami worked on several short films, television shows, and commercials Her next feature film,
Love is Five, Seven, Five! was released a year later in 2005. In 2006 her third film
Kamome Diner was given a limited release in Japan. It would later go on to tour a number of festivals, and was awarded the 5th Best Film at the
Yokohama Film Festival in 2007. In 2008
Glasses, her fourth film, was featured at the
Berlin International Film Festival,
Sundance Film Festival, and
San Francisco International Film Festival, though it first premiered a year earlier. At the Berlin International Film Festival,
Glasses was nominated for and won the Manfred Salzgeber Award for "broadening the boundaries of cinema today." The film was also nominated for the Grand Jury Prize for Dramatic World Cinema, though it lost to Jens Jonssen's
The King of Ping Pong. In 2008, she also helped found the production company Suurkiitos, which is the Finnish word for "thank you very much." The company handles advertising, actor management, and film distribution. Her two subsequent films were distributed through the company. After a break in writing and directing, her next film
Toilet was given
limited theatrical release in Japan and South Korea in 2010, and went on to tour the festival circuit, being shown in festivals in Canada, the United States, Japan, and Taiwan. Her film
Rent-a-Cat premiered in 2012 at the
Stockholm International Film Festival, and was later nominated for Best Feature at Oslo Films From The South Festival. In 2017, Ogigami released her film
Close-Knit, which garnered great success overseas. The film was selected for the Panorama section at the 67th Annual
Berlin International Film Festival, which specifically features queer cinema, and won the Panorama Audience Award. The film was also presented with the
Teddy Award, given to films which center LGBT topics, becoming the first Japanese film to be granted this title. == Style and influences ==