Noboru Tanaka Movies
Though largely unknown in the West, Noboru Tanaka, like his counterpart, Tatsumi Kumashiro, is one of the most important Japanese directors to emerge during the 1970s. Tanaka came to prominence during a tumultuous period in Japanese cinema: due to the popularity of television and Hollywood movies, revenues were at an all time low; Japan's finest directors, including Akira Kurosawa and Nagisa Oshima, were forced to seek funding abroad; and the popularity of the yakuza genre, a mainstay for a number of studios, was beginning to wane. Studios were forced into drastic actions in order to forestall their inevitable demise. A once prestigious studio on the verge of bankruptcy, Nikkatsu announced in October, 1971 that it would begin mass-producing a variety of soft-core porn called Nikku Roman Porno (literally Nikkatsu Romantic Pornography). Tanaka rose to be one of the premier directors of roman porno, and his works proved to be so adventurous and bizarre that he soon became one of Japan's most celebrated directors.Born in Hakuba (located in the heart of the mountainous Nagano prefecture) on August 15, 1937, Tanaka studied French literature at Meiji University in Tokyo. After securing a small job on Kurosawa's Yojimbo (1961), he decided to pursue a career in film. Soon he took and passed a directorship exam at Nikkatsu and worked as assistant director under such cinematic luminaries as Shohei Imamura and Seijun Suzuki. Tanaka made his debut not long after Nikkatsu began mass producing roman porno, though he did not garner much critical attention until his 1974 work Mauhi: Shikijo Mesu Ichiba. Unlike Kumashiro, who depicted lusty coupling with a certain straightforward rawness, Tanaka's films were much more studied and intense. Shot in stark black and white save for the final reel, Mauhi details the bleak, disconnected lives of a mother and daughter who work as prostitutes in a run-down corner of Osaka. Though the film has a gritty neo-realist quality that does not shy away from the brutal and vulgar existence of these two women, Tanaka consciously distorts reality, rendering it grotesque; the film's end consists of a mentally challenged boy killing a chicken and then himself, and it is one of the most jarring and surreal of the roman porno genre. Sex is drained of passion, making the act seem futile.
Tanaka followed Mauhi with two of his finest and most celebrated works, Jitsuroku Abe Sada (1975) and Edogawa Rampo Ryokikan: Yaneura no Sanposha (1976). Based on the same true story of which Oshima based his Ai no Corrida (1976), Jitsuroku is a masterwork in its own right. Featuring an astonishing performance by veteran roman porno actress Junko Miyashita, the film brilliantly portrays the increasingly destructive behavior of two lovers (culminating in a sex-induced strangulation and bloody castration) and Japan's growing militancy during the 1930s in a manner that is more grotesque and unnerving than erotic. Jitsuroku is considered to be one the finest films of the roman porno genre as well as one of the finest films Japan produced in the 1970s.
Though ostensibly a sex film, Yaneura is so garish and rococo that it barely fits within the genre. Adapted from the work of Japanese fantastic Edogawa Rampo (whose name is an odd Japanization of Edgar Allan Poe), the film concerns the owner of a boarding house who enjoys spying on his tenants, until his obsession with one woman, a beautiful heiress, results in perversity, madness, and murder. Tanaka's camera in Yaneura is consciously voyeuristic, recalling the perverse psychosexual tension of Michael Powell's Peeping Tom (1960) or Shohei Imamura's The Pornographers (1966).
Since his peak in the mid 1970s, Tanaka went on to produce a dozen or so more roman porno, including such works as Semeru (1977) and Tenshi no Rarawata Nami (1979). Noboru Tanaka died in 1991 just as his work started to gain an audience in Europe. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
Noboru Tanaka directed this third installment in the popular series which began with Jokousei Tenshi No Harawata (1978). Eri Kanuma stars as Nami, a Japanese field reporter writing an article about rape for a women's magazine. As she investigates a bizarre series of crimes, she links up with a male reporter writing a similar article for a men's magazine, and the pair slowly uncover a strange pattern leading to a serial rapist. Takeo Chii co-stars in this tense, moody thriller, which was followed by the flamboyant Tenshi No Harawata: Akai Inga (1981). ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
The grim, dark conclusion to Noboru Tanaka's Showa Era trilogy (preceded by Jitsuroku: Abe Sada and Edogawa Rampo Ryoki-Kan: Yaneura No Sanpo Sha) is an amoral masterpiece. Although it is not as graphic as much of their product, it remains among the most disturbing films ever released by the Nikkatsu studio. A somewhat liberal adaptation of the life of painter Shuu Ito (played here by Hatsuo Yamaya), the film focuses on his sexual torture of two wives and a prostitute (Junko Miyashita, who stars in all three films). Ito chronicles the sessions in journals, shares his pseudo-Sadean philosophy, and drives women mad with equal hell-bent intensity. Tanaka's approach is single-minded, oppressive, and bleak, but these are actually points in the film's favor. The cumulative effect is quite powerful, and not for the faint of heart. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

- 1976
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The snooping landlord of a rundown Tokyo boarding house witnesses a grisly murder that sends him spiraling down the path of madness in this classic Japanese shocker based on a story by famed author Edogawa Rampo. The year is 1923. Goda is the owner of a Tokyo boarding house populated by a motley collection of shady characters. He spends most of his days up in the attic, spying on his tenants through a series of holes drilled in the ceiling. One day, Goda spies a prostitute murdering one of his tenants and immediately begins to feel as if the woman is his soul mate. His perverse obsession quickly taking over every aspect of his life, Goda soon decides to prove his love by committing an act of murder so heinous that the object of his affections will be powerless to deny his undying devotion. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Junko Miyashita, Renji Ishibashi, (more)
Inspired by the true-life tale of a broken woman whose hedonistic tryst with a high-class restaurateur resulted in a horrific crime of passion that littered Tokyo headlines in 1936, director Noboru Tanaka's stark tale of passion has lost none of its power to shock since its original release in 1975. The daughter of a wealthy merchant, beautiful Sada Abe (Junko Miyashita) is banished from her wealthy father's home when he discovers that her virginity was stolen from her in a brutal rape. Subsequently sustaining her existence as a prostitute, Sada soon makes the acquaintance of restaurateur Kichizo (Hideaki Ezumi) -- who is immediately captivated by her mysterious beauty. As the couple eschews the outside world in favor of a secluded week of sexual bliss, pleasure soon gives way to obsession -- setting into motion a dangerous sequence of events that can only end in tragedy. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Junko Miyashita, Hideaki Ezumi, (more)
Noboru Tanaka returned to direct the third of Nikkatsu's pinku eiga melodramas examining prostitution in various Japanese cities. This one focuses on modern-day Osaka, and although it is still a softcore film, is the most outrageous of the lot. The casting is almost demented, with classical ballerina and staunch feminist Genshu Hanayagi smoking a cigarette with her privates, poet Sakumi Hagiwara blowing up some gangsters by suicidally detonating a gas-filled love doll, and similarly peculiar appearances from notorious druggie Meika Seri and genre icon Junko Miyashita. Highly recommended for pinku eiga aficionados, this one must be seen to be believed. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Junko Miyashita
The second of Nikkatsu's trilogy of softcore melodramas looking at prostitution in various Japanese cities, this dark look at ritualistic temple sex in Edo from director Noboru Tanaka is quite a departure from the light, comic tone of Chusei Sone's Maruhi: Joro Ichiba. Resembling nothing so much as an Asian version of all those Roman-set Italian sex films of the 1970s, the film deals with various members of Japanese royalty subjecting women to sadomasochistic sexual practices in the temple for supposedly religious reasons. Rie Nakagawa (as "the Death Goddess") stars with Yuri Yamashina, Moeko Ezawa, and Hijiri Abe. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
Noboru Tanaka's well-made but depressing entry in Nikkatsu's popular Hirusagari No Joji series is the story of a young flower-delivery boy named Jun (Akira Takahashi) who is hopelessly in love with Ryoko (Miyoko Aoyama), a sales clerk at the store where he works. Jun is an idealist, and his hopes of love are dashed when he discovers that Ryoko works nights as a prostitute to support her toddler. Devastated, Jun viciously spreads the news about Ryoko's secret life, causing her to get fired from the store and lose her enraged fiance. As in Kaben No Shiziku, Tanaka works the woman-flower connection for all it's worth, but the story line works almost perversely to undercut his imagery. The real theme here is how frustrated idealism can turn to hatred in a heartbeat, and Tanaka does a good job with that part of the story, although the overall effect is somewhat muddled. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
Although not up to the caliber of popular Nikkatsu director Noboru Tanaka's better-known works, this amusing sex comedy still has its moments. Four venal, bickering sisters and their husbands come to their ancestral home, where their mother is on her deathbed. The four couples -- when they're not busy cheating on each other -- squabble and search for the two-million-dollar diamond on which their dotty mother spent the entire estate money. As cinematic tradition dictates, they don't get it (in this case because their mother swallows it shortly before expiring), and richly deserve to be penniless for their avaricious and immoral behavior. Mari Tanaka stars in this amiable time-killer with Mikiko Sakai, Hidemi Hara, and Chigusa Takayama. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
Pinku eiga specialist Noboru Tanaka, later responsible for the striking Tenshi No Harawata: Nami, directed this memorable genre entry for Nikkatsu. Mari Tanaka, from the Koi No Karyudo series, stars as Saeko, a young woman pathologically jealous of anyone standing between her and her older sister, Yumi (Keiko Tsuzuki). After Saeko maliciously seduces Yumi's boyfriend (Toshihiko Oda), he learns that they are only half-sisters, as Saeko was the result of her father's affair with a maid, and gets back together with Yumi. Insanely jealous, Saeko jumps aboard a late-night train and follows them to a mountain resort, where the inevitable bloody conclusion occurs. Stylish and absorbing, this tragic tale was one of the best pink films of its time and set high expectations for Tanaka, which he only rarely achieved. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide








