Female Teacher- In Front Of The Students -

Roman Porno / Psychological Drama

Actress Junko Miyashita delivers a surprisingly nuanced performance, moving from stoic professionalism to quiet desperation. The film does not glorify its explicit content; instead, it feels clinical and oppressive. The male students are not charismatic villains but banal, petty sadists, which makes the ordeal more realistic and unsettling.

Female Teacher – In Front of the Students is a quintessential entry in the Nikkatsu Roman Porno catalog, directed with uncomfortable precision by Shōgorō Nishimura. The film uses its exploitative framework to examine power, shame, and the fragile line between authority and victimhood. Female Teacher- In Front of the Students

Female Teacher – In Front of the Students (Onna kyōshi: seito no me no mae de, 1982)

The story follows Yuko, a new high school teacher who inadvertently becomes a target of blackmail by a group of students after a compromising photograph surfaces. What sets this film apart from lesser entries in the genre is its unflinching focus on psychological disintegration. Nishimura deliberately frames scenes through the eyes of the students—the "in front of" in the title is literal. The camera often holds on the teacher’s face as she performs under duress, turning the classroom into a theater of humiliation. Roman Porno / Psychological Drama Actress Junko Miyashita

★★★☆☆ (3/5 – Powerful but punishing)

Female Teacher – In Front of the Students is a challenging watch that succeeds as a dark character study but will alienate those seeking pure exploitation or straightforward drama. It is a film about watching and being watched, and it leaves you feeling complicit. Recommended only for serious students of Japanese pink film or psychological horror. Female Teacher – In Front of the Students

However, the film is very much a product of its era and genre. Pacing is slow by modern standards, and the dialogue is often stilted. Viewers expecting a conventional thriller or revenge narrative will be frustrated—the film denies catharsis until a haunting, ambiguous final shot. The score, a sparse synth pad, adds to the malaise rather than providing relief.