Keisuke Kinoshita

Directing

Keisuke Kinoshita

Born December 5, 1912Shizuoka, Japan68 credits

Keisuke Kinoshita (木下 惠介, Kinoshita Keisuke, December 5, 1912 – December 30, 1998) was a Japanese film director. Hugely popular in his home country of Japan, Keisuke Kinoshita worked tirelessly as a director for nearly half a century, making lyrical, sentimental films that often center on the inherent goodness of people, especially in times of distress. He began his directing career during a most challenging time for Japanese cinema: World War II, when the industry’s output was closely monitored by the state and often had to be purely propagandistic. He refused to be bound by genre, technique, or dogma. Kinoshita excelled in almost every genre: comedy, tragedy, social dramas, period films. He shot all films on location or in a one-house set. He pursued severe photographic realism with the long take, long-shot method, and went equally far toward stylization with fast cutting, intricate wipes, tilted cameras, and even classical scroll-painting and Kabuki stage technique. Kinoshita was highly prolific, turning out some 42 films in the first 23 years of his career. For this, Kinoshita explained that he "can’t help it. Ideas for films have always just popped into my head like scraps of paper into a wastebasket." While lesser-known internationally than contemporaries such as Akira Kurosawa, Kenji Mizoguchi and Yasujirō Ozu, he was a household figure in his home country, beloved by both critics and audiences from the 1940s to the 1960s. Although few concrete details have emerged about Kinoshita's personal life, his homosexuality was widely known in the film world. Screenwriter and frequent collaborator Yoshio Shirasaka recalls the "brilliant scene" Kinoshita made with the handsome, well-dressed assistant directors he surrounded himself with. His 1959 film Farewell to Spring (Sekishuncho) has been called "Japan's first gay film" for the emotional intensity depicted between its male characters. Kinoshita received the Order of the Rising Sun in 1984 and was awarded the Order of Culture in 1991 by the Japanese government. He died on December 30, 1998, of a stroke. His grave is in Engaku-ji in Kamakura, very near to that of his fellow Shochiku director, Yasujirō Ozu.

Known For

Filmography

Father
1988Father
DirectorMovie
Oh, My Son!
1979Oh, My Son!
DirectorMovie
Dodes'ka-den
1970Dodes'ka-den
Executive ProducerMovie
Brother
1969Brother
DirectorTV
Immortal Love
1961Immortal Love
DirectorMovie
Spring Dreams
1960Spring Dreams
DirectorMovie
The Snow Flurry
1959The Snow Flurry
DirectorMovie
Twenty-Four Eyes
1954Twenty-Four Eyes
as (uncredited)Movie
Boyhood
1951Boyhood
DirectorMovie
The Good Fairy
1951The Good Fairy
DirectorMovie
Wedding Ring
1950Wedding Ring
DirectorMovie
Broken Drum
1949Broken Drum
DirectorMovie
Apostasy
1948Apostasy
DirectorMovie
The Portrait
1948The Portrait
DirectorMovie
Woman
1948Woman
DirectorMovie
Phoenix
1947Phoenix
DirectorMovie
Marriage
1947Marriage
DirectorMovie
Army
1944Army
DirectorMovie
Port of Flowers
1943Port of Flowers
DirectorMovie
Otoko no iki
1942Otoko no iki
WriterMovie