Kazuo Ikehiro
An image from Zatoichi and the Chest of Gold, one of the productions that also features Kazuo Ikehiro.
Kazuo Ikehiro

Kazuo Ikehiro

October 25, 1929 — Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Kazuo Ikehiro got his start as an assistant working for directors like Kenji Mizoguchi and Kon Ichikawa. He always had a strong preference for working in jidai-geki and says that he only did a number of modern-day yakuza films because of studio demands. Ikehiro developed a gritty, unconventional style that made him an excellent match for Zatoichi and the antihero screen personae of Raizo Ichikawa.

Possibly his greatest achievement came with Raizo, when he played an instrumental part in the Nemuri Kyoshiro series. The first three movies had been fairly straightforward chambara adventures, but with 1964's Sword of Seduction, Ikehiro steered the series into the surreal and stylistically outrageous extremes that made the Son of the Black Mass so legendary.

Zatoichi and the Chest of Gold

Zatoichi and the Chest of Gold

1964

Zatoichi's Flashing Sword

Zatoichi's Flashing Sword

1964

Zatoichi's Pilgrimage

Zatoichi's Pilgrimage

1966

Monkey

Monkey

1978

Shinobi No Mono 5: Return of Mist Saizo

Shinobi No Mono 5: Return of Mist Saizo

1964

Lone Wolf Isazo

Lone Wolf Isazo

1968

Sleepy Eyes of Death 4: Sword of Seduction

Sleepy Eyes of Death 4: Sword of Seduction

1964

Shinobi no mono 8: The Three Enemies

Shinobi no mono 8: The Three Enemies

1966