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  1. Heinosuke Gosho (五所平之助, Gosho Heinosuke, 24 January 1902 – 1 May 1981) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter who directed Japan's first successful sound film, The Neighbor's Wife and Mine, in 1931.

  2. Heinosuke Gosho was a Japanese director, writer and editor who made the first sound film in Japan. He is known for his adaptations of classic literature and his social commentary.

    • Director, Writer, Editor
    • January 24, 1902
    • Heinosuke Gosho
    • May 1, 1981
  3. Mar 21, 2021 · An Inn at Osaka (1954) by. Heinosuke gosho. Publication date. 1954. Topics. film, cinema, movie, japanese cinema. Language. Japanese.

    • 122 min
  4. Apr 30, 2024 · Gosho Heinosuke was a Japanese motion-picture director and writer famous for films concerning the everyday lives of middle-class people. He is also noted for adapting Japanese literary works to the screen and for his creative use of silence in sound pictures, subtle pictorial symbols, and rapid.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Heinosuke Gosho (1902-1981) was one of Japan's most important film directors for several decades of the twentieth century. He directed the first "talking" picture in Japan in 1931 and came to excel in what film historians classify as Japan's "shomingeki" genre, or movies that depict the lives of the lower and middle classes with both realism ...

  6. Oct 31, 2018 · Quote: Winner of the International Peace Prize at the 1953 Berlin Film Festival and considered “one of the really important postwar Japanese films, Where Chimneys Are Seen focuses primarily on the interconnected lives of two couples in a lower-middle-class neighborhood in Senju, a poor industrial section of Tokyo.

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  8. Heinosuke Gosho (五所平之助, Gosho Heinosuke, Tokyo, February 1, 1902 - May 1, 1981) was a Japanese director and screenwriter. In a career of 43 years during which he made nearly 100 films, he was known as one of the leading practitioners of the shōmingeki genre.