Pinku Eiga: An Introduction to Japanese Hardcore Grindcore
In 1964, the first of the Pink Movies was Daydream, the first Pink Movie with a substantially big budget compared to Movies that have been previously produced. Takechi's Pink Movie Black Snow in 1965, resulted in the director being arrested on charges of obscenity. Black Snow caused a high profile trial, which became a major battle between Japan's intellectual community and the conservative establishment's ideology. Takechi inevitably won the lawsuit and the controversial publicity surrounding the trial increased the production of Pink Movies substantially. Three of the most important Pink Movie directors are Hiroshi Mukai, Kinya Ogawa and Shinya Yamamoto. A major Pink Movie studio, Wakamatsu Studios, was formed by director Koji Wakamatsu in 1966. Koji Wakamatsu is well known as "The Pink Godfather" and called "the most important director to emerge in the Pink Movie genre", Wakamatsu's independent productions are critically acclaimed as well as respected works of art concerned with vivid gratuitous sexual scenes and extreme hardcore violence interlaced with political messages.
Nudity and sexual escapades first officially entered Japanese cinema with Satoru Kobayashi's controversial and popular independent production Flesh Market, which most fans and critics consider it being the first true Pink Movie. Kobayashi's independent feature Movie took in over 100 million yen, with the total production cost of the Movie being only 8 million Yen. Tamaki Katori, who was the star of the Movie Flesh Market, exploded on the big screen and skyrocketed, becoming the leading early Pink Movie superstars, with over 600 appearances in total, earning the title "Pink Princess".
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