Kintaro Inoue
Directing
Known For

The film tells the story of a young nobleman who finds himself alone in the midst of turmoil in his 70,000 koku estate, where he is surrounded by his beautiful younger sister Yukihime, who helps him, his beloved Namie and many other family members.
The Master of the Sword Dance

Inoue was something of a rarity in the sense, that he was a Shochiku house director who seems to have worked mostly in period films, often with big stars like Hasegawa or Bando. "Sumidagawa", named after the river that runs through Tokyo, is also a period film, but thematically a modern one. All the themes that you associate with the normal Shochiku women's films set in the present day are in this film, just in a different context: love, the planning of a marriage, career, family relations and societal melancholy. There is no action or swordplay.
Sumida River
No description available.
Irohagana Yotsuya Kaidan

Bored Hatamoto movie #12
Bored Hatamoto: The Demon of Chinatown

Silent jidaigeki film
Miyamoto Musashi

Film about Ghost-cat.
Yaji Kita Cat Ghost Road

The story of a lovely "maiko" who bloomed in Gion. Three half-sisters play out a tale of tearful love between father and daughters against the backdrop of the city's dance festival.
祇園物語 春怨

The ambiguous relationship between a woman musician and her young student.
Tsukiyo Karasu
No description available.
Rikugun Daikoshin
No description available.
Dochu hiki
No description available.