
Three humorous love stories set in rural Japan.
Does Conduct Report on Professor Ishinaka have end credit scenes?
No!
Conduct Report on Professor Ishinaka does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of Conduct Report on Professor Ishinaka, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Toshirô Mifune
Teisaku Nagasawa

Ryô Ikebe
Shuichi Kihara

Kamatari Fujiwara
Takezo Yamada

Eitarô Shindô
Yamazaki

Haruo Tanaka

Atsushi Watanabe
Kinichiro Nakamura

Kan Yanagiya
Seijiro, Yoshiko's brother-in-law

Chieko Nakakita
Katsuko, Yoshiko's sister

Shigeo Miyata

Yaeko Izumo

Yōnosuke Toba

Yūji Hori
Yuzo Kawai

Chōko Iida
Teisaku's mother

Yōyō Kojima

Tsuruko Mano

Zeko Nakamura

Setsuko Wakayama
Yoshiko Kimura

Fumindo Matsuo

Hiroshi Tsukiji

Haruko Toyama

Mayuri Mokushô

Fujio Nagahama

Yōko Sugi
Mariko Yamada

Shiro Mizutani

Tsurue Ichimanji
Eitaro Shindo's wife
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Challenge your knowledge of Conduct Report on Professor Ishinaka with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
What was the false claim that Yuzō made to the villagers?
He found a hidden treasure in the forest
He and his comrades buried 460 drums of gasoline in Yamazaki's orchard
He discovered an ancient shrine on the hillside
He organized a secret protest against the town council
He and his comrades buried 460 drums of gasoline in Yamazaki's orchard
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of Conduct Report on Professor Ishinaka, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
In a quiet village in Aomori, a respected professor and novelist named Ishinaka becomes the steadying voice for a townful of small desires and big histories. The first threads pull tight when a young man, Yuzō, Yūji Hori bursts in with a wild claim: he and his army comrades buried 460 drums of gasoline in farmer Yamazaki’s orchard. The orchard’s owner, Yamazaki, Eitarô Shindô, welcomes the challenge with stubborn humor while Ishinaka, Yuzō, and a townsman named Nakamura start digging. They soon abandon the excavation and retreat to the warmth of sake, while Yamazaki’s daughter Moyoko uses a traditional folk dance to brighten the evening and soothe the moment. Later, Yuzō confesses to Moyoko that the drums were a pretense—his way of courting her and finding a reason to meet again. The dig is abandoned, but not the matchmaking instinct that lingers in the air. Nakamura, a practical man who keeps the village’s nerves steady, and Yamazaki marvel at the odd romance blooming from a rumor, and Yamazaki even asks Ishinaka to act as a matchmaker for Moyoko and Yuzō, seeing in their reunion a small, hopeful future.
Meanwhile, in a separate strand, Takezo Yamada, the bookstore’s owner, Kamatari Fujiwara receives two tickets to a traveling burlesque show. He and Shuichi Kihara, Ryô Ikebe, decide to attend as a kind of public morals “examination.” The news reaches Mariko, Yamada’s daughter, and she Yōko Sugi is furious at the notion that her father would indulge in such a performance. She drags her boyfriend Shuichi—the son of Kihara—outside to confront their fathers, and a heated quarrel erupts: Mariko and Shuichi align with their parents, while the two men blame each other for the idea. The clash threatens to sever the young couple’s bond, yet Ishinaka steps in to help mend the rift, guiding the families back toward harmony and nudging Mariko and Shuichi toward reconciliation.
On a different road, Yoshiko from Iwaki—Setsuko Wakayama—visits her sister Katsuko, who is hospitalized. A palm-reader among the patients predicts that Yoshiko will soon meet her future husband. After a ride back from a teahouse, Yoshiko’s path crosses with Teisaku, a man from Harago village. She wakes up in Teisaku’s home and, moved by the late hour, agrees to stay the night. Teisaku’s mother, Chōko Iida, ensures the family’s reputation remains intact by having a constable and Ishinaka prepare a certificate stating that Yoshiko slept in the mother’s room and that her virginity remains intact. The next morning, as Yoshiko returns toward her home, Teisaku asks Ishinaka whether he believes in love at first sight. Ishinaka, in a rare moment of certainty, agrees and urges Teisaku to accompany Yoshiko all the way to her house, opening the door to a possible, hopeful tomorrow.
Across these interwoven days, the village relies on a gentle balance of humor, ceremony, and honest feeling. The threads of rumor, music, and quiet desire weave together to reveal how ordinary people respond when longing meets circumstance, and how a seasoned adviser like Ishinaka can steer two different generations toward a kinder understanding of love, loyalty, and community.
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