The world-famous woodblock artist Hokusai is a widower who lacks the ability to earn money, and he lives with his daughter Oei at the house of his friend, Bakin. Hokusai meets a woman called Onao and finds himself uncontrollably attracted to her, but she disappears all of a sudden. One day, an excited Oei brings home a young girl who looks exactly like Onao. Immediately, Hokusai starts to paint, using the young girl as a model. The illusion of Onao drives Hokusai back into the waves of youth as he painted the masterpiece of the gigantic octopus and the beauty being seduced, at the age of 90.
Japanese filmmaker/scriptwriter Kaneto Shindo’s most famous directorial efforts include The Island (1960), a nearly silent, but powerful glimpse at a lonely farmer’s daily toil, and Children of Hiroshima (1952), a wrenching and sentimental account of the city’s post-bomb aftermath. Shindo was born in Hiroshima and got his start in films as an art director during the late ’30s. Less than a decade later, he wrote his first screenplays and went on to work with a number of Japanese directors, including Kenji Mizoguchi and Kon Ichikawa. In 1950, Shindo was a co-founder of a production company. He made his directorial debut in 1951 with The Story of a Beloved Wife.
He was married to actress Nobuko Otowa (1925–1994), who appeared in several of his films. He won the 1996 Japan Academy Prize for Director of the Year for A Last Note.— allmovie guide
Doc Block, Matheus Cassano, Domas, Strawberries & Cream, Classroom Battles, Kelvane, Rock and Bull, The Macho King The Illmatic One, Rupert Pupkin, Michelle K, Daniela, Christian K., Francisco R., Coheed 2.5, John, The Inmost Night, Erdiawan, Dakila, Polyglot, Bruno Leal
Picasso was fan of this too: The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife (蛸と海女 Tako to ama?, literally Octopus and shell diver) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dream_of_the_Fisherman's_Wife