Tamizo Ishida

Most Popular Tamizo Ishida Trailers

Total trailers found: 13

Sagohei the Three-footer Trailer (1944)

06 July 1944

The Fighting Firemen Trailer (1939)

22 June 1939

Kichigoro, a firefighter from the Maeda family of the Kaga Principality, rescues Oshimo, the younger sister of Jirokichi, a city firefighter from the Ha-gumi group, from a samurai who is trying to kidnap her.

Fallen Blossoms Trailer (1938)

02 February 1938

Set against the backdrop of an imperial victory in the civil war leading up to the Meiji Restoration, Fallen Blossoms tells the story of the sorrows of women in a geisha house in Kyoto by recounting the relationships of its inhabitants.

The Woman Aiming for the Shogun Trailer (1937)

21 October 1937

A man attacks the shogun, but does not succeed in his assassination attempt. He flees to the mountains and hides in a shed.

The Seven Changes of a Paper Crane (Part 1) Trailer (1941)

17 January 1941

The story is based on the serial novel by Tsunoda Kikuo.

Keshô yuki Trailer (1940)

14 February 1940

Shinpan botan dôrô Trailer (1928)

01 January 1928

Adaptation of the story “Peony Lantern” from 1928.

Old Songs Trailer (1939)

01 February 1939

Set against the 1877 Satsuma Rebellion, two Osaka families navigate the radical social shifts of the early Meiji Era.

The Seven Changes of a Paper Crane (Part 2) Trailer (1941)

07 March 1941

The story is based on the serial novel by Tsunoda Kikuo.

Yoru no hato Trailer (1937)

11 May 1937

Okiyo runs a restaurant in Asakusa. She struggles with the times and the relationships around her.

Flower Picking Diary Trailer (1939)

21 October 1939

Based on "Heaven and Maiko", a short story from the book "Chiisaki Hanabana" by Yoshiya Nobuko, it is the story of two girls of different family backgrounds in Osaka.

Military Song of the Morning Mist Trailer (1943)

29 April 1943

At the beginning of the Meiji era, three brothers of a samurai family each stand up to the times.

Bellflower Trailer (1940)

30 July 1940

Following Flower Picking Diary (1939), Tamizo directed another film starring Hideko Takamine, based on a story by Nobuko Yoshiya.