Lovetide Explained

Lovetide
Producer:Tomoyuki Tanaka
Screenplay:Dai Nishijima
Starring:
Music:Yoshio Nikita
Cinematography:Tadashi Iimura
Studio:Toho
Distributor:Toho
Runtime:81 minutes
Country:Japan

is a 1955 Japanese film directed by Ishirō Honda based on the story Fukeyo kawakaze by Hidemi Kon. The film is set in a post-War Tokyo where two of its citizens are lovers who reunite after being separated by the war.

Production

Lovetide was director Ishirō Honda's follow-up to his film Godzilla and was his first film specifically made for female audiences. The film was made with the studio promoting it as "a gorgeous love melodrama with Toho's best cast, meant for all the women-fans."

The film is based on the story Fukeyo kawakaze by Hidemi Kon. The film's story and cast (specifically Mariko Okada and Chieko Nakakita, the wife of producer Tomoyuki Tanaka) have been described Honda authors Steve Rylfe and Ed Godziszewski as being similar to the film Floating Clouds that was directed by Mikio Naruse and released a few weeks after Lovetide. Tanaka had mentioned that if he had not steered Honda towards predominantly making science fiction films, Honda would have become "a director like Mikio Naruse."

Release

Lovetide was distributed theatrically by Toho on 9 January 1955.

See also

References

Bibliography