Yukichi Iwata Trailers
My Love on the Other Side of the Mountain TrailerPassion to Soar TrailerNew Woman Question and Answer Trailer
My Love on the Other Side of the Mountain TrailerPassion to Soar TrailerNew Woman Question and Answer Trailer
Total trailers found: 33
01 June 1939
Jie attended a women's university with the financial support of her geisha sister Oha and became a lawyer.
01 December 1932
This 1932 adaptation is the earliest sound version of the ever-popular and much-filmed Chushingura story of the loyal 47 retainers who avenged their feudal lord after he was obliged to commit hara-kiri due to the machinations of a villainous courtier.
01 May 1926
Japanese silent film from 1926. (Obo-chan meaning "Young Master.") Written by Ayame Mizushima, the first female screenwriter in Japan.
28 June 1934
Keitaro is a law student and Yaeko is a high school girl. They are neighbors, and their friendship is starting to develop into something more romantic.
14 January 1932
Kan’ichi Hazama and Omiya Shigisawa are engaged to be married, but Omiya breaks the engagement to marry a wealthy banker’s son.
11 December 1931
Japanese silent film directed by Yasujirô Shimazu, originally released as a two-part movie on December 11, 1931.
11 May 1934
A young man discovers that the woman who raised him is his stepmother. His stepbrother, who is unaware of the revelation, resents his mother for always punishing him more severely than his stepsibling.
16 November 1933
Japanese film from 1933, adapted from Masao Kume's serialized newspaper novel.
31 October 1935
Fujio is beautiful, talented, well-heeled, and engaged to up-and-coming diplomat Munechika. She has promised him a gold watch, a family heirloom, as an emblem of their engagement.
23 December 1931
The film is a lengthy work interweaving characters from different backgrounds and social strata in a narrative centered around the experiences of its heroine, Yumie Sone.
07 March 1935
The story focuses on the widower Nemoto, ostensibly a businessman, who has one son, Kanichi, the hero of the title.
29 August 1936
A musical film made for the inauguration of Shochiku's Ofuna Studio, with an all-star cast of the era.
17 April 1931
The three-hour Ai yo jinrui to tomo ni are / Love, Be with Humanity (1931) starts as a satire of alienation in the world of money, develops into a lumberland epic with a forest fire on Sakhalin Island, turns into a tragedy of King Lear dimensions, and manages to amaze the blasé audience with a happy end in the Wild West.
18 March 1932
Japanese film from 1932, adapted from the novel by Kan Kikuchi. The first sound film from director Yasujiro Shimazu.
17 April 1931
The three-hour Ai yo jinrui to tomo ni are / Love, Be with Humanity (1931) starts as a satire of alienation in the world of money, develops into a lumberland epic with a forest fire on Sakhalin Island, turns into a tragedy of King Lear dimensions, and manages to amaze the blasé audience with a happy end in the Wild West.
27 April 1928
The logger Yamato has been raising his daughter alone since his wife died in childbirth. The baron who owns the forests where he works convinces him to let him adopt the child, despite his reluctance.
24 June 1921
The simple and honest elementary school principal Taiga (Iwata) was at a loss after the school's donation money was stolen.
12 August 1932
Shigeko and Midori, star swimmers at the renowned Kirishima Girls’ School, are training relentlessly with their sights set on the Los Angeles Olympics.
01 February 1934
Japanese drama from 1934. A major production of Shochiku Studio, directed by Hiroshi Shimizu.