Starring Ryu Chishu from Ozu Yasujiro’s Otoko wa Tsuraiyo, Shimizu’s 1941 feature Mikaheri no Tou realistically explores the nature of children’s education. Set in a mountain boarding school, the film tells various stories about the school’s teachers and problem students. —YesAsia
Hiroshi Shimizu was born in Shizuoka Prefecture on March 28, 1903 and passed away in Kyoto on June 23, 1966. He dropped out of his studies at Hokkaido University in order to join Shochiku’s Kamata studio as an assistant director 1922. Promoted to the director by the age of 21 with his first film, Toge no Kanata (Beyond the Pass) (1924), he enjoyed a reputation of being a skillful director, particularly for melodramas and comedies. A “trial marriage” to the actress Kinuyo Tanaka in 1927 ended in divorce two years later. Shimizu directed 140 films for Shochiku up to and throughout World War 2.
After the war he established the Hachinosu Eiga studio in collaboration with several colleagues. This allowed him to work independently of the studios, and films such as Children of the Beehive (1948), where he employed homeless children he had taken in and raised himself, resulted. He also directed films for Shin-Toho and Daiei, the last of which, Hana no Omokage (Image… read more
Whilst never being melodramatic nor over sentimental I felt Mikaheri no Tou still manages to be both captivating and poignant. Shimizu Hiroshi was able to capture so much detail in the authentically of life in a boarding school whilst still keeping to his simple lyrical cinematic poetry. It's like an anthropology report written by a poet.