Bunjiro Mizutani Trailers
Men vs. Women TrailerFamily Meeting TrailerStorm in the City Trailer
Total trailers found: 21
30 September 1927
Comedy by Kiyohiko Ushihara. Once a full-length feature film, now only 14 minutes remain.
07 March 1930
A farmer’s boy, obsessed with his balsa-and-paper flying models and with dreams of real aircraft, develops a friendship with the daughter of the local squire, who introduces the lad to her pilot brother and his flying officer friends; through hard work, and despite the handicap of a lowly class status, he eventually succeeds in qualifying as a pilot and joining the air force.
03 April 1936
A melodrama about a businessman's relations with the three women in his life.
10 November 1928
Japanese silent film from 1928, ranked as Kinema Junpo's second-best Japanese movie of the year.
22 February 1934
A melodrama by noted auteur and father of director Yoshitaro Nomura, Hotei Nomura. This is apparently the first adaptation of Izumi Kyoka's The Romance of Yushima.
08 April 1921
A small town boy dreams of being a famous fiddler; Meanwhile, two convicts escape from prison and hide in the woods.
15 November 1930
A modern girl suddenly intrudes into a widower's family home.
01 August 1931
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.
29 August 1936
A musical film made for the inauguration of Shochiku's Ofuna Studio, with an all-star cast of the era.
18 March 1932
Japanese film from 1932, adapted from the novel by Kan Kikuchi. The first sound film from director Yasujiro Shimazu.
14 April 1932
The story of a sailor who begins a love affair with a woman he saves from suicide.
15 August 1934
Japanese movie from 1934. The final film of director Hôtei Nomura, who died from a stroke suffered at a screening of this film.
31 May 1934
Japanese film from 1934, based on a novel by Itsuma Maki (real name Kaitarō Hasegawa).
17 May 1934
Japanese film from 1934, based on a novel by Itsuma Maki (real name Kaitarō Hasegawa).