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Pages in category "Japanese propaganda films" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
First Japanese film to get a foreign release [11] 1936: The Only Son: Yasujirō Ozu: Chishū Ryū: Drama: Osaka Elegy: Kenji Mizoguchi: Isuzu Yamada Yoko Umemura: Drama: Sisters of the Gion: Kenji Mizoguchi: Isuzu Yamada: Drama: 1937: Avalanche: Mikio Naruse [12] The Daughter of the Samurai: Mansaku Itami Arnold Fanck: Setsuko Hara Sesshu ...
Lists of films produced in Japan include: List of Japanese films before 1910; List of Japanese films of the 1910s; List of Japanese films of the 1920s; List of Japanese films of the 1930s; List of Japanese films of the 1940s; Lists of Japanese films of the 1950s; Lists of Japanese films of the 1960s; Lists of Japanese films of the 1970s
Propaganda activities in Japan have been discussed as far back as the Russo-Japanese War of the first decade of the 20th century. [2] Propaganda activities peaked during the period of the Second Sino-Japanese War and World War II. [3] [4] Scholar Koyama Eizo has been credited with developing much of the Japanese propaganda framework during that ...
Cinema poster for Sadao Yamanaka's 1937 Humanity and Paper Balloons. Unlike in the West, silent films were still being produced in Japan well into the 1930s; as late as 1938, a third of Japanese films were silent. [29] For instance, Yasujirō Ozu's An Inn in Tokyo (1935), considered a precursor to the neorealism genre, was a silent film.
Japanese propaganda poster featuring Japanese agrarian immigrants in Manchukuo, designed for English speakers. The Allies were also attacked as weak and effete, unable to sustain a long war, a view at first supported by a string of victories. [176] The lack of a warrior tradition such as bushido reinforced this belief. [177]
These are depictions of diverse aspects of war in film and television, including but not limited to documentaries, TV mini-series, drama serials, and propaganda film.The list starts before World War I, followed by the Roaring Twenties, and then the Great Depression, which eventually saw the outbreak of World War II in 1939, which ended in 1945.
Propaganda: There Was a Father: Yasujirō Ozu: Mitsuko Mito, Chishū Ryū: Drama: 1943: Sanshiro Sugata: Akira Kurosawa: Denjiro Okochi, Susumu Fujita: Drama Martial arts: Akira Kurosawa's first film Momotarō no Umiwashi: Mitsuyo Seo: Propaganda Animation: 1944: Ano hata o ute: Gerardo de Leon, Yutaka Abe