[1][2] He often made adolescents the protagonists of his films, which addressed political themes through personal drama.
[1][2][3] After graduating from the University of Tokyo, Miyoji Ieki joined the Shochiku film studios in 1940, where he became an assistant of Heinosuke Gosho and Minoru Shibuya, before debuting as director with Torrent (Gekiryū) in 1944.
[1][3] After World War II, he directed youth films and romances like The Sad Whistle (1949), before being expelled by Shochiku together with other filmmakers as a communist sympathiser during the Red Purge.
[3] In the following years, Ieki, working for independent companies, directed his most notable films, including Beyond the Clouds (1953), a portrait of young kamikaze pilots, Sisters (1955), Stepbrothers (1957), an account of the ongoing conflicts in a military family, and Naked Sun (1958), a youth drama set among railway workers.
[1][3] Films of this era and later years include A Pebble by the Wayside (1964), an adaptation of the novel by Yūzō Yamamoto, and The Only Child (1969).