Universally considered one of the greatest Japanese directors, Keisuke Kinoshita worked almost his entire career for Shochiku, the Japanese studio that also housed Yasujiro Ozu. Shochiku was that studio most devoted to what the Japanese call shomin-geki, stories of everyday life; yet while Ozu developed a rigorous, austere style that he perfected from film to film, Kinoshita was constantly changing, challenging himself to adapt to new subject matter and ways of storytelling. The director of Japan’s first color feature film, the charming musical satire Carmen Comes Home, could move just a few months later on to the bold experimentation just a few months later of A Japanese Tragedy, a work whose jumbled timeframe and insertion of newsreel footage anticipates the modernist films of the Sixties. He made bold use of traditional Japanese art forms such as kabuki (The Ballad of Narayama) and brush painting (The River Fuefuki), but could… read more
"This small and gentlemanly director proved to be [one of] the most prolific [directors] of his generation, turning out some 42 films in 23 years. The temptation is to assume that such a prodigious output could only characterize someone who repeated himself continually. But Kinoshita constantly surprised critics by refusing to be bound by genre, technique or dogma. He excelled in both comedy and tragedy; the 'home drama' of the contemporary family in isolation from social problems, and period films exposing social injustices; 'all location' films and films shot completely in a one-house set; he pursued a severe photographic realism with the long-take, long shot method, and he [went] equally far toward stylization with fast cutting, intricate wipes, tilted cameras, and even medieval scroll-painting and Kabuki stage techniques. Each film had some major facet of experimentation for Kinoshita." —Audie Bock
This is missing practically everything, not to mention A Broken Drum (1949).