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  1. Zoku aoi sanmyaku: Directed by Tadashi Imai. With Setsuko Hara, Ryô Ikebe, Yôko Sugi, Michiyo Kogure. In this sequel to Aoi sanmyaku (1949) the focus is not on the students', but the teachers' life. When one day a love letter is discovered it escalates into case over which teacher and students clash.

    • (114)
    • Drama
    • Tadashi Imai
    • 1949-07-26
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Aoi_sanmyakuAoi sanmyaku - Wikipedia

    Aoi sanmyaku (青い山脈, lit. Blue Mountain Range) is a 1949 black-and-white Japanese film directed by Tadashi Imai. It is based on Yōjirō Ishizaka's novel of the same name, which was first published in serialised form in 1947.

  3. Zoku aoi sanmyaku Yukiko no maki (続青い山脈 雪子の巻) is a 1957 color Japanese film directed by Shūe Matsubayashi. Cast. Keiko Awaji; Takashi Shimura; References

  4. With Setsuko Hara, Ryô Ikebe, Michiyo Kogure, Yôko Sugi. When a post-war high school girl is seen with an older boy many find the nontraditional notion unacceptable and try to trick the girl and also assail her right to continue the relationship.

    • (200)
    • Drama, Romance
    • Tadashi Imai
    • 1949-07-19
  5. Synopsis. In this sequel to Aoi sanmyaku (1949) the focus is not on the students', but the teachers' life. When one day a love letter is discovered it escalates into case over which teacher and...

  6. His 1947 novel Blue Mountain Range (青い山脈, Aoi sanmyaku) portrayed the emancipated post-war youth through the relationships of a group of high school students. While widely popular in Japan, with his writings repeatedly made into films, only a small portion of his writings have been translated and published in English.

  7. In this 1949 film, Setsuko Hara is Miss Shimazaki, a modern, liberated, proto feminist teacher who assures her pupils in an all girl high school in a small town in Japan that is OK for girls to be dating boys and not something immoral, as traditional cultural mores before the war would indicate.