Sound Recordist
Japanese comedy film.
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The ghost of a samurai's wife takes revenge on her husband.
Sound Recordist
1959 film directed by Teruo Ishii for Shintoho.
Sound Recordist
Japanese comedy film.
Sound Recordist
20th film adaptation of the novel Ono ga tsumi (published 1900-1901).
Sound Recordist
Japanese film about motorcycle racing.
Sound Recordist
Horror film about a killer dwarf.
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An Inn at Osaka, rarely seen outside Japan, follows the story of an insurance company executive from Tokyo, Mr. Mito, who is demoted to the Osaka office. He takes a room at a small inn and tries to rebuild his life. Notable for its exquisite framing and cinematography, An Inn at Osaka allows its complicated plotlines to disappear behind the minutiae of penury and humiliation that Mito and others suffer during the post-war economic and social reconstruction.
Sound Recordist
A sad and troubled man finds a new job five years after the end of WWII, where he writes love letters for other people.
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Gosho’s most celebrated film both in Japan and the West, Where Chimneys Are Seen is perhaps the most compelling example of his concern for, and insights into, the everyday lives of lower-middle-class people. Based on Rinzo Shiina’s novel of the absurd, the film depicts the lives of two couples against the backdrop of Tokyo’s growing industrialization during the 1950s.
Sound Recordist
1952 Japanese film directed by Kunio Watanabe.
Sound Recordist
A self-absorbed young actor humiliates an elderly Noh performer, who then commits suicide. His act of cruelty compels his father to disown him, leading the once promising actor to a life on the streets. But his desire to win back the respect of his father and the affection of the dead actor's daughter pushes him toward a more noble existence. Naruse employed a delicately structured mise-en-scene in this family melodrama, which evokes the work of Josef von Sternberg.
Sound Recordist
Drama about a couple and how they found themselves related with music, their egos and each other.
Sound Recordist
Japanese domestic drama.
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The otherwise promising young man Asaji (Heihachirô Ôkawa) and his younger brother Yuji (Hideo Saeki) face blighted lives because of society's disapproval of their illegitmacy and déclassé family.
Sound Recordist
1936 P.C.L. adaptation of Natsume's novel.
Sound Recordist
A story of two sisters, the older being more traditional, the younger a "moga" ("modern girl"). Their widowed father runs the family sake shop, but is running into financial trouble, causing him to tamper with his stock; Meanwhile, his long-time mistress yearns for something more serious. Amidst this, the older sister is introduced to a well-off suitor: A university boy, much more intrigued by the less traditional little sister. A doddering grandfather, an officious uncle and busybody neighbors also don't make the lives of the hardworking members of the family any easier.