
Director
Hideo Gosha
Born 1929 · Akasaka, Tokyo, Japan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Hideo Gosha (February 26, 1929—August 30, 1992) was a Japanese film director. Among his most famous films are Goyokin and Hitokiri, released in 1969, and The Wolves, released in 1971. His most famous film in the West is Sword of the Beast, released by Criterion. Gosha's films are some of the darkest films from the samurai genre. He won the 1984 Japan Academy Prize for Director of the Year for The Geisha. Description above from the Wikipedia article Hideo Gosha, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Directed

Three Outlaw Samurai
Director · 1964

Sword of the Beast
Director · 1965

Goyokin
Director · 1969

Samurai Wolf
Director · 1966

Tenchu!
Director · 1969

The Wolves
Director · 1971

Gate of Flesh
Director · 1988

Cash Calls Hell
Director · 1966

Tange Sazen: The Million Ryo Pot
Director · 1982

Samurai Wolf II
Director · 1967

Violent Streets
Director · 1974

Four Days of Snow and Blood
Director · 1989

Sazen Tange and The Secret of the Urn
Director · 1966

Hunter in the Dark
Director · 1979

Bandits vs. Samurai Squadron
Director · 1978

Death Shadows
Director · 1986

The Oil-Hell Murder
Director · 1992

Heat Wave
Director · 1991
Writing

Three Outlaw Samurai
Writer · 1964

Sword of the Beast
Writer · 1965

Goyokin
Writer · 1969

The Wolves
Screenplay · 1971

Cash Calls Hell
Screenplay · 1966

Tange Sazen: The Million Ryo Pot
Screenplay · 1982

Violent Streets
Writer · 1974

Sazen Tange and The Secret of the Urn
Screenplay · 1966

Mute Samurai
Original Story · 1973