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A further group of early movies came from director Kiyoshi Komori who had been directing mainstream films for the original Shintōhō since 1953 but when that company dissolved, began directing pink films for Shintōhō Eiga. Komori made a number of films distributed by Shintōhō from 1964 until his retirement from pink film in the mid 1970s ...
1) live action pink films made by independent studios (e.g. Wakamatsu, OP Eiga) for release to adult theatres, 2) live action films distributed by major studios for wide release. These would include the Nikkatsu Roman Porno series (1971-1988) and Toei Porno (early 1970's, described in the pink film entry) which have separate subcategories.
The following are lists of films produced in Japan in the 1970s: List of Japanese films of 1970; List of Japanese films of 1971; List of Japanese films of 1972; List of Japanese films of 1973; List of Japanese films of 1974; List of Japanese films of 1975; List of Japanese films of 1976; List of Japanese films of 1977; List of Japanese films of ...
Mitsuru Ōkura was the president of the major film studio, Shintōhō, from 1955 until the studio's bankruptcy in May 1961. [3] [6] He produced numerous films during this time, including Emperor Meiji and the Great Russo-Japanese War (1957), which held the Japanese box office record of 20 million admissions for decades, up until its record was broken by Hayao Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli anime ...
Reiko Ike (池 玲子, Ike Reiko, born May 25, 1953 in Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese actress, singer, and entertainer. She is best known for her roles in the genre of action/erotic movies known as pink films. Ike also released an album of songs in 1971, Kōkotsu No Sekai.
Pages in category "1970s Japanese films" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 315 total. ... Pink Lady no Katsudō Daishashin;
Director Mamoru Watanabe made his debut with the now lost film Hussy in 1965. Virgin Rope Makeover is a remake of that film. [3] Watanabe also made other films at this time working with actresses Mayuko Hino and Naomi Oka with Oka usually playing the mature woman luring the innocent Hino into sadistic adventures.
Yamamoto filmed Love Hotel for Tōkyō Kōei and it was released theatrically in Japan by Shintōhō Eiga in September 1968. [1] With this film, Yamamoto found the style which would make him one of the most popular pink film directors for the next decade. [7]