Tazuko Mineno May 2026
By 1936, she knew Mizoguchi’s craft better than he did. That year, against every convention of the patriarchal studio system, Tazuko Mineno was granted a director’s contract by a small production company, Tokyo Hassei Eiga. She was 26 years old. Her debut feature was Hatsukoi no Niwa ( The Garden of First Love ), a 72-minute silent drama.
The print was fragile, scratched, missing the final six minutes. But it was real. tazuko mineno
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. By 1936, she knew Mizoguchi’s craft better than he did
But the dead do not rest when they are hidden. Tazuko Mineno is not a “female director.” She is a director. She is the ghost who proves that cinema’s history is not a male line—it is a broken mosaic, with pieces deliberately swept under the rug. Her debut feature was Hatsukoi no Niwa (
But she didn’t stay there. She became obsessed with the man who would define Japanese silent cinema: .
That is a lie. She existed. In 2016, a film archivist named Kyoko Hirano was cataloguing a private collection in Nagano Prefecture. She found a 16mm reduction print—a third-generation copy—of Hatsukoi no Niwa (1936). The title card read: Directed by Tazuko Mineno.