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Synopsis

Ichikawa's 1956 adaptation of Nihonbashi was the first to take the work of Kyoka Izumi— until then regarded as a writer of common tragic melodramas—and re-evaluate it as a tanbi-ha work of decadence, aestheticism, and intrigue. Ichikawa's film presents the tragic plot of the young geisha who is unable to enact her love for a man publicly in any way other than a histrionic story of torment, a hear

Year1956
CountryJapan
DirectorKon Ichikawa
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Japan · Japanese Golden Age

Films with Similar Themes

unrequited love · geisha culture · social constraints · decadence and aestheticism · tragic melodrama

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