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When screened in Tokyo in 2018, modern critics were astonished. The film is not a curiosity; it is a real work of art. One sequence—a 360-degree pan around a weeping willow tree as the heroine decides to die—is a shot that Mizoguchi himself would have envied. Tazuko Mineno retired from film in 1941, married, and ran a small grocery store in Yokohama until her death in 1989. She never gave an interview. She never protested her erasure. When a young journalist found her in 1985 and asked about her films, she reportedly said: “They were burned. So was I. Let the dead rest.”
The critics were stunned. Not because it was a masterpiece (it was called “competent, melancholic, and sharp”), but because a woman had directed such a fluid, confident, and masculine-coded film. Mineno directed only two more films: Shinobi yoru Chūshingura (1939) and Geisha no tsuma (1940). Then, war consumed Japan. The militarist government clamped down on cinema; female directors were deemed “unsuitable for national morale.” After 1940, the film reels of The Garden of First Love were lost—probably melted down for war materials or destroyed in the 1945 firebombing of Tokyo. tazuko mineno
But she didn’t stay there. She became obsessed with the man who would define Japanese silent cinema: . When screened in Tokyo in 2018, modern critics
Mineno became Mizoguchi’s live-in apprentice—a deshi —a role usually reserved for young men. For nearly a decade, she did everything: clapper loader, script supervisor, location scout, editor, and assistant director. Mizoguchi was a brutal perfectionist, known for his obsessive long takes and psychological cruelty toward actors. But Mineno was tougher. She learned his rhythmic, flowing camera style, his deep social conscience, and his technical precision. Tazuko Mineno retired from film in 1941, married,