Tatsumi Kumashiro Movies

Though largely unknown in the West, Tatsumi Kumashiro is arguably the most important Japanese director to emerge during the 1970s. Kumashiro 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). Kumashiro's films both popularized this new genre and elevated it into the realm of art cinema.

Born in 1927 in Saga City in the southern island of Kyushu into an old samurai family, Kumashiro was the oldest son of a pharmaceuticals wholesale merchant and judo master. By junior high, he rebelled against both his strict father, who firmly believed in the teachings of the Hagakure (the philosophical text on the virtues of the samurai), and the general militarism of Japan during the early 1940s, by cutting school to read Western literature and see movies. He was particularly impressed by Kurosawa's debut Sugata Sanshiro (1943). In order to avoid the draft, Kumashiro entered the medical department at Kyushu Imperial University in 1945, but he withdrew soon after Japan surrendered the war. Much to his family's chagrin, Tatsumi announced that he had no interest in running the family business, and instead he enrolled in Tokyo's Waseda University to study English literature. Though he always longed to be a novelist, he concluded that he could not support himself doing so, and in 1952, he took and passed the assistant directorship exam at Shochiku studios. In 1955, he moved to Nikkatsu, which was riding a crest of popularity with its youth oriented taiyozoku movies.

Though Kumashiro was on a clear track to direct, he would not helm a film until 1968's Kaburitsuki Jinsei. Stylistically, the film showcased long takes and a gritty visual sensibility that would run throughout his career. After Nikkatsu began to produce roman porno, Kumashiro was presented with a hard choice: make porn or work in television. For someone who spent much of his adult life working toward making films, television was not an appealing option. Kumashiro reluctantly choose roman porno in spite of an industry-wide prejudice against the genre and continual harassment by the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department for obscenity. Kumashiro's first breakthrough was his first roman porno, Nureta Kuchibiru (1972). The film proved to be a major commercial and critical success -- so much so that the PR department of Nikkatsu asked if Kumashiro would include the word nureta (meaning "wet," with all of its sexual connotations) in his subsequent films.

Japanese critics quickly realized that Kumashiro's work was something more than mere genre films. For his next film, Ichijo Sayuri: Nureta Yokujo (1972), an All About Eve-like tale about strippers, he won a prestigious Kinema Jumpo award for best script, and Hiroko Isayama won a best actress prize. During the next couple years, Kumashiro cranked out movies at a dizzying rate, and in the process, he produced some of his finest works, including Koibitotachi wa Nureta (1973), Akasen Tamanoi: Nuraremasu (1974), and Yojohan Fusuma no Urabari (1973), the last of which is considered to be one of the best Japanese films of the '70s.

Like Shohei Imamura, Kumashiro sets his films in down-and-out communities in the fringe of Japanese society such as the brothel districts of Tokyo or a blue-collar town outside of Osaka. His films portray a rawness and an earthiness that seem to articulate a bawdy sensuousness edged with despair. Kumashiro's characters often use sex as a way to forestall emotional and economic oblivion. At the same time, he punctuates his films with the sort of radical frivolity that recalls Jean-Luc Godard and Seijun Suzuki. One scene in his Maruhi: Shikijo Mesu Ichiba
(1974) features a bank robbery where the get-away vehicle is a balloon. Koibitotachi wa Nureta (1973) climaxes with an interminable naked leapfrog game. At their core, however, Kumashiro's films are (not surprisingly) about relations between the sexes. Recalling the works of bawdy 19th century playwright Ihara Saikaku, Kumashiro populates his films with strong, vibrant, and instinctual women who sacrifice themselves to passion. Male characters are, by contrast, alienated, passive and miserable, as if the weight of society grips them so tightly that rebellion is ultimately impossible.

After a period of making mainstream (non-roman porno) movies, Kumashiro returned to make Akai Kami no Onna (1978) which was named the one of the best films of the year by Kinema Jumpo. Just as Kumashiro's cinematic reputation was cemented at home, Japan's film industry censorship body, which insists that all genitals be blurred out, inhibited Kumashiro's international distribution. The 1976 Cannes Film Festival screened an uncensored print of Akasen Tamanoi: Nukeraremasu, and it received rave reviews from the French Press. Unfortunately, uncensored prints of his other films were not available. Though it was praised by critics and Francois Truffaut hailed it a "great movie," audiences laughed at the blurs during the crucial love scenes in Yojihan Fusuma no Urabari. Luckily, by the '80s, Europe caught up with Kumashiro, and a number of his films are included in programs on Asian cinema in France and Italy.

As the popularity of roman porno began to wane in the early 1980s, Kumashiro's health began to decline. While making Ushi Mitsu no Mura in 1983, he suffered from a collapsed lung. Evoking the never-say-die spirit of the Hagakure, Kumashiro returned and finished the film, which was eventually screened at Cannes. Though his health proceeded to decline, he continued to make movies. His final film, Bo no Kanashimi (1994), was made while he was hooked up to an oxygen tank. Tatsumi Kumashiro died on February 24, 1995, of heart and lung failure. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
1994  
 
Acclaimed director Tatsumi Kumashiro, who made a career out of elevating the high-budget, soft-core-porn genre Nikku Roman Porno into the realm of art, ended his career with this grisly sex-charged yakuza drama. After eight years in prison, middle-aged gangster Tanaka (Eiji Okuda) is out and looking for a little payback. Unfortunately, the mob boss and his smooth-talking underling Kurauchi (Hakuryu) are much more interested in making fast yen than drawing blood. An old battle-grizzled warrior, Tanaka feels utterly out of place in this new profit-minded ethos and instead sticks with what he does best -- horrible bloodcurdling violence. He can kill barehanded without breaking a sweat and, if the situation requires it, he can suture up his own wounds. When the boss, who both respects and fears his charge, quietly tries to push him aside in favor of Kurauchi for succession as gang leader, Tanaka decides to wage war against his rival. At the same time, Tanaka has a spy for the enemy gang brutally murdered, turns an innocent young lass into a junkie whore, and engages in kinky sex with his housewife mistress. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Eiji OkadaEiko Nagashima, (more)
1988  
 
A producer of softcore videos is a family man who suffers from sexual dysfunction in this often disturbing erotic drama. He discovers he can only be aroused when his blood is drawn. He carries on a series of affairs with some of his erotic actresses until two conspire to end his philandering ways. Toshiyuki Nagashima plays the producer whose sexual obsessions lead him to ruin. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kaori MomoiToshiyuki Nagashima, (more)
1987  
 
African-American actor Michael Wright (Sugar Hill, Money Talks) stars in this softcore pinku eiga melodrama based on a popular novel by Aimi Yamada, which popularized the dating of black men as something of a social cachet in Japan. Wright is a G.I. named Spoon who goes AWOL from his base and falls in love with Kim (Kanako Higuchi), a Japanese nightclub singer. They move in together, but Spoon can't stay faithful, spreading his physical charms to several women including Kim's friend, Maria (Michiyo Okusa). The cultural differences, infidelity, and social pressure make for a very complicated relationship. Before things can come to a head, Spoon is dragged back to his base for a court-martial -- a disappointing non-resolution for a film that could have been the Japanese Jungle Fever. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Michael WrightKanako Higuchi, (more)
1985  
 
In this romantic and erotic drama, Oda has achieved a place in the world which makes him think that it would be appropriate for him to find a mistress. He is a well-known poet and is married. He selects Yuko, a girl still in school, and duly finds an apartment for her. However, he is seldom around, and she spends a lot of her time waiting for him to come around and make love to her. Their relationship is very uneven: she is not allowed to play around, while he carries on with a divorced woman next door. They almost have a child, but he insists on an abortion. Later, when he dies, she shows up at his funeral. Her presence there is unwelcome, though everyone knows who she is. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kenichi HagiwaraKatsuo Nakamura, (more)
1980  
 
Pathos and irony nuance this drama by director Tatsumi Kamishiro about the relationship between a young man and an adoptive father-figure. Akira Tagawa's (Tomokazu Miura) father has been imprisoned for a murder he did not commit. The devoted Akira wants to free him even though the man is an alcoholic whose only ambition in life is to bed down women. Akira enlists the help of Shiro Iwasa (Tomisaburo Wakayama), a newspaper journalist who treats him with such understanding and compassion that Akira finally is able to experience what a good father must be like. As he continues to work to free his father, he is unaware that these very efforts might well destroy his surrogate father-son relationship. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Tomokazu MiuraAyumi Ishida, (more)
1979  
 
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Though this film is unlikely to find a wide audience in America, Akai Kami No Onna was ranked fourth in prestigious film journal Kinema Jumpo's annual ten best list in 1979, and Junko Miyashita, an icon of Japan's popular softcore films, garnered a best actress award. Director Tatsumi Kumashiro gives us an intimate portrait of the film's central character set against a working-class background. Miyashita plays a hitchhiker picked up by a truck driver (Renji Ishibashi) who takes her back to his rundown hovel. Claiming that she is running away from her husband, she moves in with the trucker and proceeds to engage in a grueling routine of non-stop sex -- until her violent ex-boyfriend pays an unexpected visit. This film is considered one of the finest movies in the Nikku Roman Porno genre. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Junko Miyashita
1975  
 
This self-reflexive pinku eiga film may be to Nikkatsu softcore what Boogie Nights was to American hardcore. Shin Kishida stars as Juzo, a self-important pinku eiga director clearly modeled on Nagisa Oshima. Production is halted on his new film when lead actress Meiko (Meika Seri) is too obviously pregnant to film sex scenes. Looking for a replacement, he comes across the ubiquitous Naomi Tani, starring here in one of the rare roles which doesn't require her to be bound with rope. Everything goes well until Tani starts a sex scene with Hajime Tanimoto, who got Meiko pregnant. Juzo realizes that he's in love with his new starlet, so he cancels the film, marries Tani, and lives happily ever after. Well directed by Tatsumi Kumashiro, and with plenty satirical in-jokes to amuse devoted pinku eiga buffs, Kurobara Shoten is among the genre's most engaging self-examinations. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Naomi TaniShin Kishida, (more)
1974  
 
1973  
 
This sensual Japanese drama focuses on the sexual and romantic liaison between a young man and a geisha, whom are about to marry. The story is set at a geisha house in a 1930s military garrison town and is based on a novel by Ro Miura. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Junko MiyashitaHideaki Ezumi, (more)

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