
Nobuo Nakagawa
Director·1905–1984·Kyōto, Kyōto Prefecture, Japan
18 horror credits
Nobuo Nakagawa (中川 信夫, Nakagawa Nobuo, April 18, 1905 – June 17, 1984) was a Japanese film director, most famous for the stylized, folk tale-influenced horror films he made in the 1950s and 1960s.
Born in Kyoto, Nakagawa was early on influenced by proletarian literature and wrote amateur film reviews for the Kinema Junpō film magazine. He joined Makino Film Productions in 1929 as an assistant director and worked under Masahiro Makino. When that studio went bankrupt in 1932, he switched to Utaemon Ichikawa's production company and made his debut as a director in 1934 with Yumiya Hachiman Ken. He later moved to Toho, where he made comedies starring Enoken and even documentaries during the war. It was at Shintoho after the war that he became known for his cinematic adaptations of Japanese Kaidan, especially his masterful version of Tokaido Yotsuya Kaidan in 1959.
To Western audiences, his most famous film is Jigoku (1960), which he also co-wrote. The film was released on DVD by the Criterion Collection in 2006.
Director18 films

The Living Koheiji
Director

Japanese Ghost Story Masterpiece Theater: The Sealed Room of the Inner Chamber
Director

Sea of Wonders
Director
Mysterious Thirteen Nights: Chapter Special - Ghost Story of Tragic Love: Dance of the Folding Fan
Director

Mysterious Thirteen Nights Volume 2
Director

Mysterious Thirteen Nights: Chapter 4 - The Yokai Blood-stained Comb
Director

Mysterious Thirteen Nights Volume 1
Director

Mysterious Thirteen Nights: Chapter 1 - Ghost Story at the Kagamigaike
Director

Snake Woman's Curse
Director
This Is Japan
Director

Jigoku
Director

The Ghost of Yotsuya
Director

The Lady Vampire
Director

Ghost in the Regiment
Director

Black Cat Mansion
Director

The Ghost of Kasane
Director

The Ceiling at Utsunomiya
Director

The Vampire Moth
Director
Writer3 films

The Living Koheiji
Writer

Snake Woman's Curse
Writer

Jigoku
Screenplay