Kyoko Kishida Movies
A few performers become so tightly associated in the public mindset with a specific role that the one turn overshadows and obfuscates the remainder of their career. This is particularly true of Japanese actress
Kyoko Kishida. In the West, most film buffs and historians will forever associate
Kishida with her contribution to the seminal arthouse classic
A Woman in the Dunes (1964), directed by
Hiroshi Teshigahara. They thus remember
Kishida as something of a cinematic "one-hit wonder." But, with dozens of cinematic turns to her credit (several in legendary Japanese arthouse films),
Kishida was no
Renée Maria Falconetti. Instead, she qualified as a highly versatile, dynamic performer, graced with a striking, stirring onscreen presence, who traversed many a cinematic landscape with delicate finesse.
Born in Tokyo in 1930,
Kyoko was the daughter of Japanese playwright Kunio Kishida -- a protégé of
Henrik Ibsen and
Anton Chekhov who investigated, dramatically, the Japanese plight of poor psycho-social adjustment.
Kyoko Kishida balanced a strenuous workload throughout her life, with roles in over 90 Japanese films, of which a handful are most important. She debuted in 1958, as Sakie in
Yasuzo Masumura's crime drama Futeki na Otoko. Three years later, she essayed the part of Ryuko in
Masaki Kobayashi's mammoth
Ningen no Joken III (aka
The Human Condition, Part III), a meditation on the human incivility and animalism that rear their heads when men march off to the battlefield.
Kishida also delivered a memorable supporting turn in the November 1962 release
Watashi Wa Nisai (aka
Being Two Isn't Easy), a bittersweet paean to family life and new parenthood directed by
Kon Ichikawa, about a mom and a dad struggling through a series of domestic calamities in an effort to raise their two-year-old son;
Kishida plays the best friend of the mother, Chiyo (
Fujiko Yamamoto).
That same year,
Kishida collaborated with the greatest Japanese cinematic visionary of the 20th century,
Yasujiro Ozu, for the director's
Samma no Aji (aka
An Autumn Afternoon), also released during November of 1962. That film, however -- a light comedy drama about the familial dynamics between a widower and his three children -- only features
Kishida in a bit part as a barmaid. She maintained a much higher profile for 1964's
Manji (aka
All Mixed Up), a sex comedy that reunited her with director
Masumura. In that picture -- relentlessly bold and shocking for its time --
Kishida stars as Sonoko Kakiuchi, a housewife who becomes uncontrollably obsessed with another woman (
Ayako Wakao).
As previously noted,
Kishida also made her most enduring impression during the year of 1964 -- that of the titular unnamed character in
Teshigahara's eccentric and haunting allegory
Woman in the Dunes. The picture casts the actress as a mysterious prisoner of a sandpit who bears the Sisyphean burden of endlessly digging sand out of a hole for use by the local villagers; she soon entraps a local entomologist in the pit, induces the man into an affair, and conceives a child with him. Shot and produced on a budget of only 100,000 dollars, this gentle and haunting erotic fable deservedly won the 1964 Cannes Film Festival Special Jury Prize and received an Academy Award Nomination for Best Foreign Language Film. It is now regarded as a seminal, vital cinematic work.
Kishida played a nurse who treats a victim of facial disfigurements in
Teshigahara's well-received 1966 psychological horror piece
Tanin no Kao (aka
The Face of Another), a film that reveals heavy thematic influence by
Georges Franju's
Eyes Without a Face. The actress continued to work throughout the 1970s and '80s in such films as
Vixen (1970),
Utamaro's World (1977),
Nippon No Don-Yabohen (1978), and
Haru no Kane (1986), but most of these features, for some unknown reason, failed to reach the West. The same cannot be said of 1987's
Taketori Monogatari (
Princess from the Moon), a comparatively popular Japanese import in the United States. That film, directed by
Kishida's old collaborator
Kon Ichikawa, brings to the screen the ancient Japanese legend of a man who finds a "moon child" encased inside of a crystal prism and decides to raise the girl as his own.
Kishida's role, that of Kougo, amounts to an extremely small part that is somewhat incidental to the story.
In 1989,
Kishida re-teamed with
Teshigahara for a bit part (as Kita-no-mandokoro) in the director's 16th century period epic
Rikyu. Additional key roles in the early '90s included a servant in
Haruki Kadokawa's
Ten To Chi To (aka
Heaven and Earth, 1990) and Mura in
Kon Ichikawa's romantic psychodrama
Fusa (1993).
Kishida's film work continued through the first decade of the new millennium, until late 2006, when -- on December 17 of that year -- the actress died of a brain tumor in Tokyo, Japan, amid a still-busy film schedule. She was 76 years old.
Kyoko Kishida married the actor
Noboru Nakaya in 1954; the couple had one son (who preceded both of them in death) and divorced in 1978. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

- 2006
-
- Add Wool 100% to Queue
Add Wool 100% to top of Queue
A pair of elderly junk collectors find their lives turned upside down when their latest procurement brings them into contact with an obsessive young knitter in the hallucinogenic feature debut of prominent short filmmaker Mai Tominaga. Ume (Kyoko Kishida) and Kame (Kazuko Yoshiyuki) troll the streets in search of cast-off treasures, and upon finding multiple balls of red wool the sisters eagerly add them to their collection. Though their latest acquisition seems to be one worth celebrating, their happiness over the find is soon offset by the arrival of a disturbed young woman (Ayu Kitaura) determined to kit the perfect red sweater. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Kyoko Kishida, Kazuko Yoshiyuki, (more)

- 2005
-
Independent Japanese filmmaker Isao Yukisada collaborates with screenwriters Chihiro Ito and Shinsuje Sato to adapt author Yukio Mishima's sexually tinged tale of obsession and intrigue in Taisho era Japan. The year is 1912, and as Emperor Taisho takes power the Japanese upper class begins mirroring the refined social graces of European aristocrats. Noble bloodline youngsters Kiyoaki Matsugae (Satoshi Tsumabuki) and Satoko Ayakura (Yuko Takeuchi) are two such citizens, and though Satoko harbors feelings for Kiyoaki that run much deeper than friendship, the girl's disapproving father (Kenjiro Ishimaru) fears that the Kiyoaki's lecherous father (Takaaki Enoki) has passed his unchaste manners on to the next generation. Having fallen from grace with the rise of Emperor Taisho, the families of both children must struggle simply to stay afloat financially. Even as she enters into her final year of high school a decade later, Satoko still longs to be with her childhood sweetheart. In order to sidestep the romance, Kiyoaki ponders the prospect of setting Satoko up with his high-strung military school pal Shigekuni Honda (Sosuke Takoaka). Later, when Kiyoaki forces sex on Satoko and the teen becomes pregnant, she furtively plans to have an abortion before traveling to Nara to become a nun. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Satoshi Tsumabuki, Yuko Takeuchi, (more)

- 2002
-
Veteran filmmaker Kihachi Okamoto revives his similarly named 1960s television series about happy-go-lucky avenger-for-hire Sukeroku (Hiroyuki Sanada) who prefers to brandish a wooden pole or a rope rather than a sword. The film opens with Sukeroku returning to his home in the mountainous Joshu region after a seven-year absence to visit his mother's grave. He quickly encounters not only old flame Osen (Kyoka Suzuki) -- who is still clearly in love with him -- but also his boyhood rival Taro (Takehiro Murata) -- who tells him that local samurai Katakura (film legend Tatsuya Nakadai) is the target of revenge. Sukeroku tries to get hired as one of the avengers but is told that four professionals have already been hired for the job. When the dignified Katakura meets his fate, Sukeroku begins to plot revenge on a more personal note. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Hiroyuki Sanada, Kyoka Suzuki, (more)

- 2000
-
- Add Dora-Heita to Queue
Add Dora-Heita to top of Queue
As the Japanese studios were declining in 1969, four legendary directors from that country's "golden age" of cinema -- Kon Ichikawa, Masaki Kobayashi, Keisuke Kinoshita, and of course Akira Kurosawa -- banded together to start their own production company. The financial and critical failure of the studio's first feature, Kurosawa's Dodes'ka-Den (1970), scrubbed all subsequent projects. One of the shelved works was this film, which was adapted by the quartet from Shugoro Yamamoto's "Diary of Town Magistrate" and was originally going to be directed by all four masters. With the passing of Kurosawa and Kinoshita in 1998, directing duties of this almost forgotten script fell to the group's sole survivor: 85-year-old Ichikawa. The film centers on Koheita Mochizuki (played by charismatic leading man Koji Yakusho), a samurai selected by the regional lord to be the magistrate of the particularly lawless district of Horisoto, a place where three such officers disappeared. This appointment arouses more than a little curiosity from the locals; Mochizuki's reputation for liquor and general licentiousness has earned him the nickname Dora-Heita, or "alley cat" (meaning "playboy"). In fact, Mochizuki has carefully cultivated his debauched persona, as he quietly tells his friend Senba (Ryudo Uzaki), who works as district administrator. He exhorts his pal to keep the rumors circulating. When the venerable district council -- who is aghast at Mochizuki's slatternly appearance -- almost votes to remove him, Dora-Heita reveals the lord's signed letter of endorsement giving him absolute authority. His first task is to clean out three powerful gangs who control Horisoto, keeping it awash in prostitution, extortion, gambling, and murder. Though samurais are forbidden to sullen themselves with such riff-raff, he boldly ventures into the prohibited brothel quarters and plays up his libertine persona in order to suss out the real criminals. In the process, he profoundly offends a band of right-thinking young samurais who soon plot to assassinate the heretical Dora-Heita. With almost everyone in the area out to get him, Mochizuki's life is further complicated by the appearance of geisha and former mistress Kosei (Yuko Asano), who demands that he take her back. Told with a sly sense of humor that was common to all four directors, this film is directed with a muscular dynamism that recalls the best of the samurai movies of old, such as Yojimbo (1961) and Harakiri (1963). Dora-Heita was screened at the 2000 Berlin Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Koji Yakusho, Yuko Asano, (more)

- 1997
-
In this melodramatic romantic tragedy, a beautiful Japanese girl learns that the best kind of love is selfless love. Virginal Mitsu (pop star Miki Sakai) works in a factory and has a crush on Tsutomu (Atsuro Watabe), a young man she met on the Tokyo streets. One day the two go out, and after some deception, Tsutomu manages to have his way with her. Coming from a broken home, he is frightened by love, so he cruelly allows her to wake up alone. A month passes and a more grown-up Tsutomu returns. By this time, Mitsu has begun working in a local club. The lovers joyously reunite and move in together. All is blissful until both notice a strange sore on Mitsu's arm. The doctors diagnose it as a curable form of leprosy. Without telling Tsutomu, Mitsu checks into a leper sanitarium. Hanging out with society's pariahs gives her much insight. She discovers the old lepers to be wonderful people. In turn, Mitsu becomes their source of joy and renewed hope. Still, she misses her Tsutomu. One day, the doctors inform her that they erred and that the sore is not leprosy. Happily she heads back to her true love until she realizes with a guilty pang that to return to him would mean unhappiness for her newfound friends. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Miki Sakai, Atsuro Watabe, (more)

- 1993
-
Plans have long been set to enable Seishiro to marry the daughter of the castle warden. He is from too humble a background to marry so exalted a personage, so the head of the Iwai family has formally adopted him in order to give him the necessary social standing. All is proceding in an orderly way when an unknown woman appears at the castle, claiming she is unable to remember who she is. She simply calls herself Fusa. Seishiro falls in love with her and marries her. They raise a family, but every day her loving husband wakes with the fear that she will recover her memory and be forced to leave him. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Kiichi Nakai, Yuko Asano, (more)

- 1991
-
In this at times comic detective thriller, the head of a lineage of Noh performers is about to step down, and someone cares enough about who his successor will be to commit murder again and again in highly symbolic ways. Noh drama is the often mystifying ritualized classical drama of the Imperial court and was never particularly popular. Japanese audiences have been undergoing artistic spiritual uplift by attending these performances for centuries, in much the same way that many attend symphony concerts today. In other words, every audience is composed of a number of real fans, and a heavy sprinkling of people attending the performance just to see and be seen or to be morally improved in some mysterious manner. The Tokyo police who are assigned to the case haven't the erudition or even the ordinary good sense to unravel the sometimes esoteric clues in this case, but a famous detective has a brother who is in the right place at the right time to put the pieces together. Among the film's highlights are scenes from actual Noh performances. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Takaaki Enoki, Takeshi Kusaka, (more)

- 1990
- PG13
Japan's answer to Don Simpson -- a flamboyant and brash producer drawn to make flamboyant and brash films -- Haruki Kadokawa takes a turn at the director's chair with this sprawling historical epic featuring a massive budget: a record-breaking five billion yen, and thousands of extras comprising most of the student population from the University of Calgary. Set during the Warring States era (1482-1558), the film opens on the real-life rivalry between feuding warlords Takeda Shingen and Uesugi Kenshin. The latter (Takaaki Enoki) begins the film as Nagao Kagetora, the younger brother of the lord of Echigo Province. Encouraged by court retainer Usami Tadayuki (Tsunehiko Watase), he challenges his inept brother for the reigns of power and kills him in an ensuing duel. Soon after becoming lord of the province, he faces a new threat with Takeda Harunobu (Masahiko Tsugawa), lord of the neighboring Kai province. Both have grand dreams of uniting their war-torn land and ruling from the imperial capital of Kyoto. Ultimately, this clash of egos, personalities, and ambitions leads to the cataclysmic 1561 battle of Kawanakajima. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Takaaki Enoki, Masahiko Tsugawa, (more)

- 1990
-
Acclaimed director and headmaster of the Sogestsu school of flower arranging Hiroshi Teshigahara helms this elegant historical drama about tea master Sen no Rikyu. A Buddhist priest who talks of the beauty of a single flower or the shape of a hand holding a teacup, Rikyu (played by Rentaro Mikuni) not only perfected the art of the tea ceremony, but he was one of the primary arbiters of taste during his age. That era was a bloody one, culminating in the uniting of Japan's disparate kingdoms by a series of strong leaders. The most ambitious and the most extravagant was Toyotomi Hideyoshi (Tsutomu Yamazaki), who favored flashy displays of wealth as much as he did violent conquest. Hideyoshi thought of the tea ceremony not as an art but as a show of refinement and power. In 1587 he held a ten-day tea-drinking orgy in Kyoto and Osaka. Hideyoshi chose Rikyu to oversee it and soon the buffoonish, violent leader and the reserved master were engaged in a thinly veiled clash of wills. Rikyu eventually does teach Hideyoshi that beauty is found in the minute. Yet when Hideyoshi receives both guns and a globe from Portuguese missionaries, he is overwhelmed with Napoleonic visions. When Rikyu expresses his reservations about Hideyoshi's impending invasion of Korea and China, the potentate demands an apology. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Rentaro Mikuni, Tsutomu Yamazaki, (more)

- 1987
-
Princess From the Moon (Taketori Monogatari) is based on an ancient Japanese legend. Toshiro Mifune plays a 9th century bamboo cutter who comes across a curious glass capsule, housing a tiny baby girl who holds a crystal ball in her hand. Once released, the infant instantly becomes a five-year-old; the astonished Mifune, whose own child has recently died, decides to adopt the girl. It isn't very long before the child becomes a beautiful adult (Yasuko Sawaguchi), whose blue eyes--a decided rarity in Japan--attract every man within hailing distance. Mifune hopes to hide his daughter away from predatory males, but the girl is constantly courted by eligible bachelors. By and by, the crystal ball begins to emit a strange sound, alerting the girl that she must return to the Moon, whence she came and where she will reign as princess. See Princess From the Moon only if you have an open mind and open heart. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Toshiro Mifune, Ayako Wakao, (more)

- 1987
-
In this gruesome and extraordinarily explicit wartime medical horror story, based on a 1948 novel by Simsako Endo, two rival surgical teams at the University Hospital in Kyushu begin on a course of practice which violates every concept of medical ethics after the moderately innocent decision to disguise the death of a patient on the operating table as a post-operative mortality. Before long, the teams are performing needless, lethal and experimental surgeries on captured American servicemen. The scenes and sounds depicting these operations are exceptionally graphic and detailed and, despite warnings during festival showings of the film, many viewers had to leave the room. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Ken Watanabe, Mikio Narita, (more)

- 1986
-

- 1986
-

- 1978
-
In this gangster film, the Japanese mafia (yakuza) are shown to be "dark suits," or corporation men, not substantially different from their legitimate cousins in the business world. Most of their time is spent going from one interminable business meeting to another, but occasionally they are forced to deal with a situation by committing extremely public murders. The cast list includes the world-renowned actor Toshiro Mifune, and locally famous Kyoko Kishida. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Toshiro Mifune, Kyoko Kishida, (more)

- 1977
-
Utamaro was an artist who lived in Edo (which was later to become modern-day Tokyo) in the late 18th century. This film, which has a complex and wide-ranging storyline, recreates the world of that time, as it appeared in Utamaro's paintings. In one the many scenes captured by the story, Utamaro watches the goings-on in a brothel while hidden in its attic. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Shin Kishida

- 1972
-
This well-received Japanese documentary covers the 11th Winter Olympics held in Sapporo Japan in February of 1972. The film is beautifully photographed in a straightforward manner, covering ski-jumping, downhill racing, ice-skating and hockey. The excitement of the hockey match between the Czechoslovakian and Russian teams is conveyed well. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
Read More

- 1970
-
In this Japanese drama, a young woman blackmails a fellow for two million yen and then tries to lure him away from his wife. To get the greedy woman to leave him alone, the fellow buys her a bar, but she refuses to stop until she destroys everyone around her. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
Read More

- 1968
-
In this Japanese drama, a housewife falls in love with a female model and embarks upon a lesbian relationship. When she must share her new lover with a male lover, the housewife becomes confused. She must also deal with her husband. Eventually all four enter into a suicide pact, but of them, she is the only one to survive. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
Read More

- 1966
-
Bearing traces of both Frankenstein and the 1959 Georges Franju horror classic Eyes without a Face, the Japanese The Face of Another is a disturbing Japanese drama featuring Tatsuya Nakadai. His face horribly disfigured in an accident, Nakadai, a wealthy industrialist, commissions a special mask from a renowned plastic surgeon. Nakadai's wife fails to recognize her husband and makes advances to him, which effectively destroys their relationship. Driven insane, Nakadai turns to murder to compensate for the loss of his identity. The melodramatic elements of the film are neatly blended with moments of erotica and generous doses of existential philosophy. The Face of Another is another thought-provoking "documentary fantasy" from the director of the cult classic Woman in the Dunes. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Tatsuya Nakadai, Machiko Kyo, (more)

- 1966
-
In this Japanese romance, a middle-aged divorcee eases her loneliness with a much-younger male prostitute and falls in love with him. He seems to fall for her too, and they move in together. Things go well, until he meets the lovely daughter of one of her friends. The fellow falls head-over-heels and proposes to the young woman. The poor divorcee decides to get revenge and so takes some nasty photographs of him and threatens to show his new love if he doesn't leave her. The young man becomes terribly upset and nearly goes mad with grief. Eventually the older woman realizes that she is wrong for harming him and gets rid of the photos. She then goes back to her lonely former life. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Kyoko Kishida, Tsutomu Yamazaki, (more)

- 1964
-
When entomologist Jumpei (Eiji Okada) travels to sand dunes on an expedition, he is met by a group of people who offer him a place to spend the night. They soon lead him to a house at the bottom of a sandpit. Upon climbing into the pit, he finds a young widow (Kyoko Kishida) living alone. Placed there by the villagers, her task is to dig sand out of the pit -- not only so that they can avoid getting buried, but so that the locals can use it for construction. The next morning, when Jumpei attempts to leave, he finds that the ladder which brought him into the pit is no longer there and the villagers inform him that he must stay and help the woman dig. After trying to get out of the pit, Jumpei takes his anger out on the woman--only to soon become her lover. After some time, he slowly gives in to accepting his predicament. This interesting story takes a simple yet effective route in philosophical allegory, focusing upon the couple's oppressive confinement and the force of their physical attraction to each other in spite of--or because of--their situation. Taken from the novel by Kobo Abe, director/producer Hiroshi Teshigahara completed this visually stunning feature on a budget of only $100,000. Winning a Special Jury Prize at Cannes in 1964, the poetic Woman in the Dunes would go on to be nominated for two Academy Awards: Best Foreign Film (1964) and Best Director (1965). ~ Kristie Hassen, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Eiji Okada, Kyoko Kishida, (more)

- 1964
-
Based on a novel by Junichiro Tanizaki, this tongue-in-cheek melodrama by Japanese director Yasuzo Masumura tells the story of Sonoko (Kyoko Kishida), a housewife who becomes obsessed with another woman. Told in a series of flashbacks as she relates her tale to a novelist, the plot follows her entanglement with the young, beautiful Mitsuko (Ayako Wakao), who she meets at an art school for women. After convincing Mitsuko to pose nude for her they embark on an affair that leads to a number of double crosses and deceptions between the two women, Sonoko's husband (Eiji Funakoshi) and Mitsuko's fiancé (Yusuke Kawazu). ~ Tom Vick, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Ayako Wakao, Kyoko Kishida, (more)

- 1963
-
- Add Bushido to Queue
Add Bushido to top of Queue
The winner of the Golden Bear Award at the 1963 Berlin Film Festival, director Tadashi Imai's stark samurai drama tells the story of a 20th Century Japanese professional who ponders the prospect of abandoning the tradition that has been in his family for the past 350 years. The Iikura family has lived by the Bushido code for seven generations. Now, it's up to Susumu to determine if the tradition will continue. Recalling the exploits of his forefathers throughout the centuries, Susumu prepares to make the decision that could forever alter the history of his bloodline. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Kinnosuke Nakamura, Yoshiko Mita, (more)

- 1962
-
Takashi Fujiki stars as a rebel in this drama about life on the Yokohama waterfront by New Wave director Masahiro Shinoda. The rebel works as an errand boy for a shipping company and vents his frustrations by plucking on the guitar. His interpretations of popular trends in music are sometimes right-on, and sometimes not exactly. Bereft of his guitar, the rebel's modes of expression are not as effective in generating interest as the Yokohama docks themselves, a fascinating world in their own right. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Takashi Fujiki, Kyoko Kishida, (more)

- 1962
-
- Add An Autumn Afternoon to Queue
Add An Autumn Afternoon to top of Queue
Director Yasujiro Ozu's final film, and a rare outing in color for him, continues his quietly observed explorations of family dynamics in postwar Japan. Frequent Ozu star Chishu Ryu plays Shuhei Hirayama, an aging widower whose three children each depend upon him in varying degrees. The eldest, Kazuo, who is married, is a spendthrift who purchases a new set of golf clubs, then hits up his indulgent dad for a loan to buy a refrigerator. The middle child, daughter Michiko, is a 24-year-old still living at home and happy to be the domestic fulcrum between her father and her younger brother, Koichi, a willful teenager. Shuhei's conviction that Michiko isn't ready for marriage scares away a potential suitor in whom she is also interested. But the old man has a change of heart after a long drinking session with several buddies, who warn him that Michiko might wind up an old maid, trapped in the web of loneliness he knows all too well. He arranges a marriage for her, and she finds herself caught between her own desires and her duty to her father. The story ends on the late afternoon of Michiko's wedding day, as Shuhei returns to his home to face life on his own, resigned to the fact that his daughter's happiness comes before his own. ~ Tom Wiener, Rovi
Read More
- Starring:
- Shima Iwashita, Shin-Ichiro Mikami, (more)