Geisha Girl (film)

Geisha Girl is a 1952 American adventure film directed and produced by George Breakston and C. Ray Stahl, and starring Steve Forrest, Martha Hyer, Tetsu Nakamura, Heihachirō Ōkawa, and Dekao Yokoo.

The plot was, in fact, created so as to educate American viewers of such Japanese traditions as a Kabuki theater presentation, a Buddhist religious ceremony, and a geisha house.

Archie discovers strange pills in the breastpocket of the suit jacket, and the sales clerk wants to cancel the deal, but they are interrupted by the military police.

Rocky and Archie are trailed to a bar where Mr. Nakano (Tetsu Nakamura), who is a powerful gang leader, encounter them and invites them to visit his home, mentioning that there is a geisha school there.

Rocky Wilson and Archie McGregor are accompanied by stewardess Peggy Barnes (Martha Hyer), who is actually a government spy trying to track down the mysterious pills because they are very powerful explosives, even more dangerous than a nuclear bomb.