was a Japanese film director, screenwriter and actor. His son is a fellow screenwriter and race horse owner .
Yamatoya was born in Horonaicho, Mikasa, Hokkaido and raised in Tokyo. He graduated from the First Department of Literature at Waseda University. While a student, he belonged to the "Waseda Alumni Scenario Research Society" with Yà Âzà  Tanaka and others, and produced documentary films. In 1962, he joined the assistant director department at Nikkatsu (8th period). He left Nikkatsu in 1966, and in the same year released his first film, Season of Betrayal, produced by Koji Wakamatsu of Wakamatsu Productions. In 1966, he formed , a group of screenwriters led by Seijun Suzuki, together with Takeo Kimura, Yà Âzà  Tanaka, Chà «sei Sone, Yutaka Okada, Seiichirà  Yamaguchi, and Yasuaki Hangai.
Yamatoya proceeded to direct such films as Inflatable Sex Doll of the Wastelands in 1967 and Not Much More Than a Pistol in 1968. He is best known as the screenwriter for Seijun Suzuki's 1967 film Branded to Kill, which is "a stark, spastically existentialâÂÂand, most affronting of all, defiantly unmarketableâÂÂcrime-flick abstraction that unfolds like the director's cracked self-portrait."
Jasper Sharp, author of Behind the Pink Curtain: The Complete History of Japanese Sex Cinema, said, "Yamatoya is definitely very interesting." According to Roland Domenig, Yamatoya used his pink films for "formal experiments," while other directors such as Koji Wakamatsu and Masao Adachi used their pink films as "political propaganda."
Yamatoya died of esophageal cancer on 16 January 1993. In the same year, he posthumously received a special award at the 2nd Japan Film Professional Awards. After his death, Haruhiko Arai, Jà «ichirà  Takeuchi, and Kenji Fukuma compiled the book, Give it to the Devil: Essays on the Cinema of Atsushi Yamatoya published by Wides Publishing.