At the age of 20, Ozaki spent a year at the University of Nebraska,
Lincoln as an exchange student. That was when he had his first acting
experience in front of the cameras for an American televised
educational program and gave him hint of his potential as an actor.
He made his professional stage debut in 1994 playing "Jim Stark", the
lead role in Rebel Without A Cause, performed entirely in English, and
dived into his full-time acting career.
He started learning acting under Yoko Narahashi at the United
Performers' Studio, Tokyo in 1994. In 1995, he was coached by Frank
Corsaro, a former Actors Studio, NY artistic director, in his drama
training.
His breakthrough came as "Lt. Yamamoto", a Kamikaze pilot, in the Elle
Company production The Winds Of God, one of Japan's most popular war
plays. In 1998, the play was performed for a month at the Judith
Anderson Theater, on Off-Off-Broadway in NY. In 1999, the troop went on
the National Tour in Japan and gave a 2 month run in NY again at the
American Place Theater on Off Broadway. With its total estimated
viewing audience of nearly 40,000, The Winds Of God became an excellent
opportunity for Ozaki to gain maximum exposure to theater fans. Playing
the 3rd lead role, Yamamoto, a Kamikaze pilot, he showed his potential
in both comedy and tragedy. Then he won acclaim by NY critics in 5
reviews of papers and magazines such as The New Yorker, Daily News,
Newsday and more.
In 2003, he appeared in Warner Bros.' period epic
The Last Samurai (2003).
Ozaki was marked by the film's stunt coordinator
Nick Powell and
selected as one of the Battle Corps (Battle Core) actors. Battle Core
was composed of the best 100 Japanese actors possessing accurate
sword-play technique, for the key battle sequences set in the mountains
of Japanese war fields. Ozaki performed as a High Ranking Samurai of
Katsumoto's (
Ken Watanabe's) troop in the last great sword-wielding
charge against forces armed with the first Western weapons of mass
destruction. After this production, he earned his membership in Taurus
World Stunt Awards Academy.
The film project, in which he literally devoted his life, was the most
prominent one to date in his filmography. It is Warner Bros.' Iwo Jima
battle epic Letters From Iwo Jima (2006), directed by Academy Award winner
Clint Eastwood and produced by
Steven Spielberg (DreamWorks) starring
Ken Watanabe. Besides Watanabe, only 7 actors were selected from the
mainland of Japan as his supporting roles. Ozaki received the honor to
be one of the 7 actors. He played as Lieutenant Okubo, Baron Nishi's
deputy, who takes the lead of the men, when Nishi dies in a battle.
Okubo's courage sacrifices his life to save his troop in the crossfire
against the US Marines. The film won numerous awards including an
Academy Award for Best Sound Editing, Golden Globe Award for Best
Picture in Foreign Language and National Board of Review's Best Film of
The Year.
After Ozaki moved his base to the US in 2007, he landed the guest star
role in NBC drama series
Heroes (2006): Season 2, Young Kaito Nakamura, father
of Hiro Nakamura, in 1977. Young Kaito stops Adam Monroe who tries to
unleash a virus that could kill billions of innocent people.
He has appeared as Ishiro Honda, a legendary Japanese director who gave a birth to Godzilla, in episode 405 "Tagumo attacks!!!" of "DC's Legends of Tomorrow" (2018) (CW). Also played as Admiral Inokuchi, a recurring guest role, in "The Man in the High Castle" (Amazon Studios) in Season 3 (2018) and Season4, as Masao Kume, a samurai defeating Mongols in a battle in Metanoia Films' "Little Boy" (2015) which won Best Picture at 2016 Premios Luminus Film Festival in Mexico, as Hydra prisoner in "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." (2014) (ABC).
Other film/TV credits include "Masterless" (2015) (Endurance Productions) , "Extant" (2014) (CBS)
Touch (2012) (FOX)
How I Met Your Mother (2005) (CBS),
Flashforward (2009) (ABC),
The Game (2006) (CW),
Gaijin: Ama-me Como Sou (2005) [Love me as I am] (Brazil),
Born to Be King (2000) (Hong Kong),
Haru and Natsu (2005) (NHK), Genroku Ryoran (NHK),
Aguri (1997) (NHK),
The 8th Samurai (2009) (AFI),
The Hirosaki Players (2010) (TK Digital,
NY), etc.
Ozaki most recently portrayed a brutal yakuza boss in a Brazilian film "Yakuza Princess" (2021) (Magnet Releasing) and voiced two roles: evil General Kato and young detective Hiroshi in "Marvel's Hit-Monkey" (2021) (Hulu).
Best of Fest Award for "The 8th Samurai" at LA Shorts Fest 2009 scoring
Academy Award qualifier. Best Actor Winner for "The 8th Samurai" at Show
Off Your Shorts Film Festival 2009. Best Supporting Actor Winner for
Lil Tokyo Reporter (2012) at Asians On Film Festival Awards - Winter 2013.