Katsumi Nishikawa
An image from The Surf, one of the productions that also features Katsumi Nishikawa.
Katsumi Nishikawa

Katsumi Nishikawa

July 1, 1918 — Chizu, Tottori Prefecture, Japan

Katsumi Nishikawa (西河克己, Nishikawa Katsumi) (1 July 1918 – 6 April 2010) was a Japanese film director most famous for his youth films (seishun eiga). Graduating from Nihon University, he started out at the Shochiku studio in 1939 and directed his first film in 1952. He moved to Nikkatsu in 1954 and, while working in a variety of genres, became most famous for his youth films starring Sayuri Yoshinaga, Yujiro Ishihara, and Hideki Takahashi. In the 1970s, he remade some of these films with the idol singer Momoe Yamaguchi and her future husband Tomokazu Miura. The Katsumi Nishikawa Memorial Film Museum was opened in his hometown of Chizu, Tottori, in 2001. Nishikawa published several books, including one about his war experience and another about filming Yasunari Kawabata's The Dancing Girl of Izu several times. He died of pneumonia on April 6, 2010.

The Izu Dancer

The Izu Dancer

1974

Sweet Revenge

Sweet Revenge

1977

The Last Song

The Last Song

1975

Love Comes with Youth

Love Comes with Youth

1963

A Portrait of Shunkin

A Portrait of Shunkin

1976

The Surf

The Surf

1975

Frankie the Milkman

Frankie the Milkman

1956

Windy Street

Windy Street

1959