Masayoshi Kawanishi

Filmes

Correnteza
Assistant Director
Otsuta está dirigindo a casa de gueixas Tsuta em Tóquio. Seu negócio está fortemente endividado. Sua filha Katsuyo não vê nenhum futuro no negócio de sua mãe porque está terminando os dias da gueixa. Mas Otsuta não desistirá. Este filme retrata a vida diurna da gueixa quando não está entretendo os clientes.
A Flor do Crepúsculo
Assistant Director
Como é a vida de uma gueixa quando sua beleza desapareceu e ela se aposentou? Okin guardou seus ganhos e tornou-se agiota, passando os dias a cobrar friamente os juros das quantias que empresta. Mesmo suas melhores amigas, ex-gueixas como ela - Otomi, Tamae e Nobu, devem-lhe dinheiro. Para todas elas, o glamour de suas vidas já passou e agora o problema é garantir o sustento nos difíceis tempos do pós-guerra. Seus filhos e amantes não aliviam a dureza de suas vidas.
Wife
Assistant Director
Ten years into a marriage, the wife is disappointed by the husband's lack of financial success, meaning she has to work and can't treat herself and the husband finds the wife slovenly and mean-spirited: she neither cooks not cleans particularly well and is generally disagreeable. In turn, he alternately ignores her and treats her as a servant. Neither is particularly happy, not helped by their unsatisfactory lodgers. The husband is easily seduced by an ex-colleague, a widow with a small child who needs some security, and considers leaving his wife.
Husband and Wife
Assistant Director
A married couple looking for an apartment move in with the husband's co-worker, a widower. The husband becomes jealous of the widower and his wife.
Forty-Eight Man
Assistant Director
Jidai-geki by Kiyoshi Saeki
Okuni and Gohei
Assistant Director
A high-born woman named Okuni travels around the country with Gohei, a samurai retainer who is in service to her. They are in search of Tomonojo, who has killed the man who was Okuni’s husband and Gohei’s master, and they cannot return to their lord’s home until they have fulfilled their duty of hunting down and killing Tomonojo.
White Beast
Assistant Art Director
The critical establishment was clearly not prepared to accept a woman's prison film featuring former prostitutes recovering from venereal diseases, unwanted pregnancies, and estranged lovers. With its cat fights, hysterical tantrums, film noir lighting, and dramatic music, White Beast is indicative of the new influences of the Hollywood psychological thriller on Naruse. Caged (John Cromwell, 1950) initiated a cycle of women's prison movies in the United States that may or may not have been shown in Japan, but the stylistics of White Beast draw on the same paranoid woman's films and film noir conventions that preceded the American cycle.