Giichi Nishihara
Giichi Nishihara | |
---|---|
Born | 1929 |
Died | 16 August 2009 (aged 80)[1] |
Other names | Shirō Sekiya |
Occupation(s) | Film director, producer, cinematographer and screenwriter |
Years active | 1965–1986 |
Giichi Nishihara (西原 儀一, Nishihara Giichi, 1929 – 16 August 2009), also known as Shirō Sekiya (関谷四郎, Sekiya Shirō), was a Japanese film director, screenwriter, producer and actor[2] best known for his low-budget and sensationalistic pink films made for his Aoi Eiga studios in the 1960s and 1970s. He has been called both "Japan's sleaziest movie-maker,"[3] and "a cult favorite among devotees of extreme cinema."[4]
Life and career
Early career
Born in 1929,[5] Nishihara worked as a professional boxer during the early post-World War II years.[6] His success in this capacity led to his entry to the film industry as an actor, playing the role of a fighter in director Kōzō Saeki's 1947 Daiei film, Town Of The Iron Fist or Street of Iron Fists (Tekken No Machi).[7][8] Nishihara served as Saeki's assistant director in the 1949 film, Morning Star Song (歌の明星).[7] In the early years of his career he worked as an actor and freelance filmmaker for several studios besides Daiei, including Shochiku, Mainichi Television and NHK.[6][7]
Pink film and Aoi Eiga Studios
The first Japanese film to contain nudity, director Satoru Kobayashi's controversial Flesh Market, was released in 1962. It was shut down by the police and censored before it could be re-released,[9] but the film became a huge box-office success. Even with the limited distribution it received as an independent production, Flesh Market, which was made for 6-8 million yen, took in over 100 million yen.[10] With the success of this movie, the pink film genre—known as eroductions at the time—had been born.[11] In the pink-boom atmosphere of the mid-1960s, many small studios were set up to produce these cheap and profitable softcore pornographic theatrical films. One such studio was Aoi Eiga, founded by Nishihara to produce his own films.[7] Some have claimed the company was a "front" for the Osaka yakuza.[6]
1960s
Nishihara made his directorial debut with Highway of Passion (1965).[7] In 1966, Tamaki Katori, star of Flesh Market, joined Aoi Eiga and quickly appeared in many films scripted and directed by Nishihara. To Aim at... (January 1967) was a crime drama, in which Katori is the only survivor after she battles with the three men with whom she has committed a major robbery.[12] Weeping Affair (March 1967) was a melodrama about Katori's relationship with a middle-aged man and his daughter.[13]
Indecent Relationship (May 1967) had Katori as a girl who is financially supporting her boyfriend by working at a hostess bar. When she finds out that the woman who owns the bar and her boyfriend are having an affair, she seeks revenge on them both.[14][15] The Weissers judge this early work, "More back-alley junk from sleaze-meister Giichi Nishihara."[16]
According to the Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films, the main difference between Seduction of the Flesh (July 1967) and Nishihara's other "cinematic excesses"[17] is that Katori is raped not once, but twice within the film's 72-minute duration.[18] The story had Katori suffering these assaults while her husband is away, and then committing suicide in shame.[19]
Pink Telephone (August 1967) was an atypical venture into comedy for Nishihara and Tamaki. The story concerns a man whose goal is to become Japan's number-one drunk.[20] Abnormal Reaction: Ecstasy (November 1967), was an erotic thriller in which Katori co-starred as the mistress of a man who has faked his death. When the "widow" discovers that her husband is not actually dead, she gets her revenge by arranging to have both her husband and Katori impaled on stakes while in bed.[21][22] Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films calls this a "somewhat restrained early project" for the director, adding, "[t]he violence is fleeting. Even the sex scenes are stilted when compared to Nishihara's later efforts."[23]
Ripped Virgin (1968)[24] had Katori as a high school girl who discovers that the man who raped her is actually her boyfriend. The Weissers judge this film "surprisingly refined" considering that Nishihara is the director.[25] Exploiting the exotic appeal of a white actresses, Nishihara co-starred Katori with two foreign actresses in Aoi Eiga's Staircase of Sex (1968).[26]
1970s
Nishihara's main actress, Tamaki Katori, left Aoi Eiga studios in the later 1960s, and then retired in 1972.[10] With her, Nishihara had produced countless films for the studio which were profitable, but were not notably successful. It was not until he teamed up with actress Yuri Izumi in the early 1970s, that he began directing box-office hits.[6] According to some Japanese sources, Nishihara and Izumi are married.[27]
In the later half of the decade Nishihara and Izumi began making films for the major pink film studio Shintōhō Eiga. Nishihara's films for this studio include such titles as Please Rape Me Once More (starring Izumi) and Grotesque Perverted Slaughter[28] (both 1976). About the latter film, the Weissers, in their Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films report, "This is probably director Nishihara's best film, but that's like choosing from rat-bite fever, jungle rot, or tick-borne typhus. They're all pretty bad."[29] Robert Firsching of Allmovie agrees with the Weisser's assessment, calling the film "Nishihara's most skillful film, as he concentrates on characterization and suspense far more here than in his usual sick rapefests."[30]
His films of this period are noted for their "twisted plots delivered in an unnerving matter-of-fact style."[31] A typical plot of one of Nishihara's "staggering sleaze-fests"[6] of the 1970s can be found in Abnormal Passion Case: Razor (1977). The heroine of this film, Reiko, is worried about her father because he recently had a near-fatal heart attack while the two of them were making love. Out of concerns that he may have a stroke if their sexual relations continue, she goes to a lawyer for advice. The lawyer suggests that she get married so that her father will have to stop having sex with her. The lawyer then proceeds to rape Reiko. The rape is interrupted by a call from the lawyer's girlfriend. The lawyer then tells Reiko she can leave, as he doesn't need to rape her anymore—his girlfriend is coming over. Reiko persuades the lawyer to pretend to be her fiancée so that she can convince her father she's really going to be married. The ruse works only too well. The father believes her, and, in shock and grief, dies of a heart attack on the spot. Reiko then kills the lawyer with a butcher knife.[32]
Nishihara retired from the film industry in 1985.[33] In 2002 he published Yakuza Director (やくざ監督, Yakuza Kantoku), his memoirs which recounted his eventful life and encounters with criminals.[7] In September 2009, the 1960s careers of Nishihara and actress Tamaki Katori—working together and separately—were the subject of a retrospective at the Kobe Planet Film Archive.[34] Summarizing Nishihara's career, Allmovie writes, "No one ever accused Nishihara of being the most subtle filmmaker in the world, but at least he manages to keep the tawdry proceedings lively."[32]
Partial filmography
Title[35] | Release date | Cast | Studio | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mad Passion Highway 激情のハイウェー Gekijō no Haiuee |
August 1965 | Mayumi Aoi Isao Matsui Setsuko Moriya |
Aoi Eiga | 66 min. B&W Nishihara's directorial debut(?)[36] |
To Aim At... 狙う Nerau |
January 21, 1967 | Aoi Eiga | ||
Weeping Affair 泣き濡れた情事 Nakinureta Joji |
March 28, 1967 | Aoi Eiga | ||
Indecent Relationship 乱れた関係 Midareta Kankei |
May 9, 1967 | Tamaki Katori Koji Satomi Setsu Shimizu |
Aoi Eiga | |
Seduction of Flesh a.k.a. Temptation of the Flesh 肉体の誘惑 Nikutai No Yūwaku |
July 11, 1967 | Tamaki Katori Chiyo Morizō Noriko Chizuki Masayoshi Nogami Yūichi Minato Joji Ohara |
Aoi Eiga | 72 min. Color |
Pink Telephone 桃色電話 Momoiro Denwa |
August 26, 1967 | Aoi Eiga | ||
Abnormal Reaction: Ecstasy 異常な反応 悶絶 Ijo Na Hanno: Monzetsu |
November 21, 1967 | Tamaki Katori Mari Azusa Teruko Amano Yasushi Matsura |
Aoi Eiga | |
Female Trap 牝罠 Mesuwana |
December 1967 | Tamaki Katori Michi Nakahara Chiyo Morizō Mari Nagisa Jirō Kokubu |
Aoi Eiga | 66 min. Part color |
Staircase of Sex 性の階段 Sei no Kaidan |
May 1968 | Tamaki Katori Edie McNair Marilyn Weir |
Aoi Eiga | 71 min. Part color |
Ripped Virgin 引裂かれた処女 Hikisakareta Shojo |
August 1968 | Tamaki Katori Hiroshi Yajima |
Aoi Eiga | |
Betrayal of Affairs 裏切の色事 Uragiri no Irogoto |
December 1968 | Aoi Eiga | ||
Sexy Angel おいろけ天使 Oiroke Tenshi |
February 1969 | Tamaki Katori Kazuko Shirakawa Setsu Shimizu Kōhei Tsuzaki Jōji Ichimura Kemi Ishiboshi |
Aoi Eiga | 74 min. Part color |
Ghost Story of Sex 性の怪談 Sei No Kaidan |
1972 | Maki Kirikawa Hiroshi Nishihara |
Aoi Eiga | |
The Devil Dwells in a Woman's Valley 女の谷に悪魔が棲む Onna no Tani ni Akuma ga Sumu |
September 1972 | Hirimi Naka Rina Takase Aki Uehara Yuri Izumi |
Aoi Eiga | 70 min. Part color Directed as Shirō Sekiya |
Grotesque Perverted Slaughter aka Present-Day Bizarre Sex Crime 現代猟奇性犯罪 Gendai Ryoki Sei Hanzai |
August 1976 | Keiko Sugi Kiyoshi Nakayama Yuri Izumi |
Aoi Eiga Shintōhō Eiga |
|
Abnormal Passion Case: Razor 異常情痴事件:剃刀 Ijojochi Jiken: Kamisori |
1977 | Yuri Izumi Jirō Kakubu |
Aoi Eiga | |
Please Rape Me Once More もう一度襲る! Mou Ichido Yaru |
January 1979 | Yuri Izumi Maki Kirikawa Eiji Togawa Hiroshi Nishihara |
Shintōhō Eiga |
Notes
- ^ Suzuki, Yoshiaki (2009). トークイベント「独立プロと西原儀一’60年代の夢」. Event (in Japanese). Kobe Planet Film Archive. Archived from the original on 14 December 2013. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
- ^ "西原儀一 (Nishihara Giichi)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 3 July 2007.
- ^ Weisser, Thomas; Yuko Mihara Weisser (1998). Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films. Miami: Vital Books : Asian Cult Cinema Publications. p. 351. ISBN 1-889288-52-7.
- ^ Firsching, Robert. "Midareta Kankei". Allmovie. Archived from the original on 26 April 2006. Retrieved 9 March 2007.
- ^ "「やくざ監督 東京進出」 (Yakuza Director: Advance on Tokyo)". Webcat Plus (in Japanese). Retrieved 3 July 2007.
- ^ a b c d e Weisser, p.36.
- ^ a b c d e f Sharp, Jasper (2008). Behind the Pink Curtain: The Complete History of Japanese Sex Cinema. Guildford: FAB Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-903254-54-7.
- ^ 鉄拳の街 (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 2 July 2007.
- ^ Domenig, Roland (2002). "Vital flesh: the mysterious world of Pink Eiga". Archived from the original on 18 November 2004. Retrieved 19 February 2007.
- ^ a b Connell, Ryann (2 March 2006). "Japan's former Pink Princess trades raunchy scenes for rural canteen". Mainichi Shimbun. Retrieved 6 March 2007.[dead link ]
- ^ Domenig, Roland (2002). "Vital flesh: the mysterious world of Pink Eiga". Archived from the original on 18 November 2004. Retrieved 19 February 2007.
The term pink eiga was first coined in 1963 by journalist Murai Minoru. But it did not come into general use until the late 1960s. In the early years the films were known as 'eroduction films' (erodakushon eiga) or 'three-million-yen-films' (sanbyakuman eiga).
- ^ Cowie, Peter, ed. (1977). "Japan". World Filmography 1967. London: Tantivy Press. pp. 387–388. ISBN 0-498-01565-3.
- ^ Cowie. World Filmography 1967, p.385.
- ^ Fentone, Steve (1998). "Immoral Relationship; A Rip of the Flesh: The Japanese 'Pink Film' Cycle". She. 2 (11): 28.
- ^ Cowie. World Filmography 1967, p.383.
- ^ Weisser, p.209.
- ^ Weisser, p.203
- ^ Weisser, p.372.
- ^ Cowie. World Filmography 1967, p.391.
- ^ Cowie. World Filmography 1967, p.384.
- ^ Firsching, Robert. "Ijo Na Hanno: Monzetsu". Allmovie. Archived from the original on 26 April 2006. Retrieved 2 July 2007.
- ^ Cowie. World Filmography 1967, pp.361-362.
- ^ Weisser, p.36-37.
- ^ Cowie, Peter, ed. (1977). "Japan". World Filmography, 1968. London: Oak Tree Publications. p. 376. ISBN 0-498-01569-6.
- ^ Weisser, p.351.
- ^ Sharp, p. 182.
- ^ Weisser, p.139.
- ^ "GENDAI RYOKI SEI HANZAI". at The Complete Index to World Film. Retrieved 2 July 2007.
- ^ Weisser, p.188.
- ^ Firsching, Robert. "Gendai Ryoki Sei Hanzai". Allmovie. Archived from the original on 26 April 2006. Retrieved 2 July 2007.
- ^ Weisser, p.181.
- ^ a b Firsching, Robert. "Ijojochi Jiken: Kamisori". Allmovie. Archived from the original on 26 April 2006. Retrieved 2 July 2007.
- ^ Matsumura, Kiyoshi. "「やくざ監督 東京進出」 (Book review: Yakuza Director: Advance on Tokyo". nifty.com (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 11 September 2005. Retrieved 2 July 2007.
- ^ "60年代・独立プロ伝説 西原儀一と香取環 前編 (1960s Independent Films: Giichi Nishihara & Tamaki Katori retrospective)" (in Japanese). Kobe Planet Film Archive. 12 September 2009. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 2 December 2009.
- ^ Filmography from "Giichi Nishihara". Allmovie. Archived from the original on 26 April 2006. Retrieved 1 July 2007., "Giichi Nishihara". The Complete Index to World Film. Retrieved 1 July 2007., Giichi Nishihara at IMDb, and "西原儀一 (Nishihara Giichi)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 1 July 2007.
- ^ Jasper Sharp names Mad Passion Highway (August 1965) as Nishihara's directorial debut, but Japanese Movie Database lists a July 1965 Nishihara/Aoi Eiga release, Sexy Hell (いろ地獄, Iro Jigoku)
Sources
- "Giichi Nishihara". Allmovie. Archived from the original on 26 April 2006. Retrieved 1 July 2007.
- Toshio Maruo. "Giichi Nishihara". at The Complete Index to World Film. Retrieved 1 July 2007.
- Giichi Nishihara at IMDb
- "西原儀一 (Nishihara Giichi)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 1 July 2007.
- Nishihara, Giichi (2002). やくざ監督 東京進出 (Yakuza Director: Advance on Tokyo) (in Japanese). Wise Publications. ISBN 4-89830-131-2. (Nishihara's autobiography)
- Sharp, Jasper (2008). Behind the Pink Curtain: The Complete History of Japanese Sex Cinema. Guildford: FAB Press. pp. 52, 61, 182, 204, 353, 378. ISBN 978-1-903254-54-7.
- Weisser, Thomas; Yuko Mihara Weisser (1998). Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films. Miami: Vital Books : Asian Cult Cinema Publications. ISBN 1-889288-52-7.
External links
- "60年代・独立プロ伝説 西原儀一と香取環 前編 (1960s Independent Films: Giichi Nishihara & Tamaki Katori retrospective)" (in Japanese). Kobe Planet Film Archive. 12 September 2009. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 2 December 2009.