Yukiko Tsukuba Trailers
No Blood Relation TrailerShin Yotsuya Ghost Story TrailerThe Willows of Ginza Trailer
No Blood Relation TrailerShin Yotsuya Ghost Story TrailerThe Willows of Ginza Trailer
Total trailers found: 16
01 May 1926
Japanese silent film from 1926. (Obo-chan meaning "Young Master.") Written by Ayame Mizushima, the first female screenwriter in Japan.
01 December 1925
A period drama about samurai who survived a loss in battle. An early jidaegeki by Hiroshi Shimizu.
30 August 1926
A hard-working new employee at a trading company is promoted through the company president's business.
15 November 1930
A modern girl suddenly intrudes into a widower's family home.
16 December 1932
An actress returns to Tokyo after a successful stint in Hollywood to reclaim—with the help of her gangster brother—the daughter she abandoned years before.
11 December 1931
Japanese silent film directed by Yasujirô Shimazu, originally released as a two-part movie on December 11, 1931.
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.
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.
14 June 1929
A feature-length work based on Kan Kikuchi’s newspaper novel, adapted for the screen by Kōgo Noda.