Suzuki was born in 1933 in
Shizuoka. He dropped out of
Ritsumeikan University's Department of Economics, and subsequently joined
Toei's
Kyoto Studio as an assistant director in 1956, learning his craft under
Masahiro Makino,
Tai Kato and
Tomu Uchida. He made his screenwriting debut on director
Kōkichi Uchide's 1963 film
Zoku: Tenamonya Sandogasa (co-written with
Takaharu Sawada), and his directorial debut in 1965 with
Osaka Dokonjō Monogatari: Doerai Yatsu, starring
Makoto Fujita. At the behest of Toei producer
Shigeru Okada, Suzuki wrote the script for female gambler film
Red Peony Gambler (1968) starring
Junko Fuji, which became a hit series spanning eight films. He directed
Star of David: Beautiful Girl Hunter (1979). His 1975 film
Torakku Yarō: Goiken Muyō, starring
Bunta Sugawara and co-written with
Shinichiro Sawai, was also a huge success and spawned nine sequels. After directing and co-writing
Kōtaro Makaritōru! (1984), Suzuki left Toei to go freelance. At the 1985
Yokohama Film Festival, he was awarded a special prize for his career. Suzuki's last film was
Binbari High School, released in 1990 and produced by
Kōji Wakamatsu. He died at the age of 80 in May 2014. ==Filmography==