Hideo Sekigawa

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1908-12-01

Deathday 1977-12-16 (69 years old)

Place of Birth Sado, Niigata Prefecture, Japan

Also Known As Хидэо Сэкигава

Hideo Sekigawa

Biography

Hideo Sekigawa (関 川 秀雄, Sekigawa Hideo, 1 December 1908 – 16 December 1977) was a Japanese film director known mainly for films with a left-wing agenda made in the late 1940s and early 1950s. His most noted works are the anti-war films Listen to the Voices of the Sea (1950) and Hiroshima (1953). Hideo Sekigawa joined the documentary branch of P.C.L. film studios (later Toho) in the 1930s where he worked on militarist propaganda films despite his Communist leanings. After the Second World War, Sekigawa debuted as co-director of the pro-unionist Those Who Make Tomorrow (1946) which was intended to illustrate the purpose of the workers' union at the Toho film studios. Having difficulties finding work due to his political leanings, he directed the anti-war film Listen to the Voices of the Sea for Mitsuo Makino's Toyoko Eiga company (later Toei Company). For the Japan Teachers Union, which had been unhappy with Kaneto Shindo's Children of Hiroshima for not being political enough, he directed Hiroshima (1953) in a semi-documentary style, parts of which were later used (uncredited) by Alain Resnais for his drama Hiroshima mon amour. In later years, Sekigawa's output included both audience-orientated genre works and documentaries. His last film was the 1969 Chōkōsō no Akebono.

Known For

Director

1969
Sky Scraper!

as Director

1968
Devil in My Flesh

as Director

1968
Tattooed Temptress

as Director

1966
1965
Vermin

as Director

1965
Dupe

as Director

1965
Sex Peddlers

as Director

1961
1960
1960
1960
1960
The Great Road

as Director

1959
A Dead Drifter

as Director

1958
1957
Roar and Earth

as Director

1953
Hiroshima

as Director

1950
Senka o koete

as Director

1948
A Second Life

as Director

1947
1946
1941
White Heron

as Assistant Director