Director: Heinosuke Gosho

foto regista
Birthday: 1902-01-24
Born in: Tokyo, Tokyo Prefecture, Japan
Biography: Heinosuke Gosho (五所 平之助 Gosho Heinosuke, 24 January 1902 – 1 May 1981) was a Japanese film director who directed Japan's first talkie, The Neighbor's Wife and Mine, in 1931. He once served as president of the Directors Guild of Japan Description above from the Wikipedia article Heinosuke Gosho, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Known for

An Innocent Witch

Ayako, a young woman from a rural fishing village, is sold by her family into a brothel when her father takes ill. There, she is quickly stripped of her innocence and illusions.
Search similar movies
7.1
An+Innocent+Witch
An Innocent Witch

1965

Search similar movies
The Neighbour's Wife and Mine

A playwright moves to a rural neighborhood to avoid the distractions of the city, but he discovers there are plenty of ways to get sidetracked in his new home, too.
Search similar movies
6.5
The+Neighbour%27s+Wife+and+Mine
The Neighbour's Wife and Mine

1931

Search similar movies
Burden of Life

Family drama. A middle-aged father has just married off his third daughter, but still has his nine year old son to raise whom he resents as he was unwanted. (British Film Institute)
Search similar movies
6.4
Burden+of+Life
Burden of Life

1935

Search similar movies
Elegy of the North

A sensitive young woman aged 22 fell in love with a middle aged man who was troubled by his unfaithful wife.
Search similar movies
5.4
Elegy+of+the+North
Elegy of the North

1957

Search similar movies
The Dancing Girl of Izu

"The Dancing Girl of Izu" tells of the story between a young male student who is touring the Izu Peninsula and a family of traveling dancers he meets there, including their youngest girl. The student finds the naïve girl attractive even though he eventually has to part with the family after spending memorable time together.
Search similar movies
6.5
The+Dancing+Girl+of+Izu
The Dancing Girl of Izu

1933

Search similar movies
Where Chimneys Are Seen

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.
Search similar movies
6.4
Where+Chimneys+Are+Seen
Where Chimneys Are Seen

1953

Search similar movies
Firefly Light

Set in the 1860s, the final years of the Tokugawa Shogunate, The Fireflies focuses on Tose (Awashima Chikage), the mistress of the Teradaya, a small inn in the Kyoto suburb of Fushimi. She does not have an easy life. Her husband, Isuke (Ban Junzaburo), is a wastrel who fancies himself a kabuki singer and who is obsessed with cleanliness. Her mother-in-law, Sada (Miyoshi Eiko) dislikes her because of her humble origins (her family are farmers) and because she fears that she will inherit the inn instead of Sugi, her daughter. Sada's hopes for Sugi, however, are dashed when she runs off with a con artist and leaves her child behind for Tose to take care of. When Sada becomes seriously ill, it is Tose who nurses her. On her deathbed, Sada asks her daughter-in-law's forgiveness. Meanwhile Isuke spends most of his time with a mistress he has taken, forcing Tose to manage the inn by herself
Search similar movies
Firefly+Light
Firefly Light

1958

Search similar movies
Rebellion of Japan

Suzuko, a woman in her twenties who has a brother with political problems (due to communist reprisals), lives for over five years in a love affair with Tate who's a young lieutenant in the Army, ultimately becoming a right-wing fundamentalist revolutionary. She marries another man, one totally dedicated to the rigorous practices of Noh theatre, in an arranged marriage, but the bond that connects her with Tate is too strong.
Search similar movies
Rebellion+of+Japan
Rebellion of Japan

1967

Search similar movies