Born in Ichikawa, Chiba, Japan in 1949, Mieko Tsudoi emerged as a notable figure in the 1970s Japanese pink film movement. She plays a rebellious character in Delinquent Girl Boss: Tokyo Drifters (1970), showcasing her ability to embody the fierce spirit of youth culture. In Delinquent Girl Boss: Worthless to Confess (1971), Tsudoi further cements her role in the genre, delivering a performance that captures the essence of the era's exploitation cinema. Her work contributes significantly to the cult film landscape, highlighting the intersection of femininity and defiance.
Delinquent Girl Boss: Worthless to Confess
Reiko Oshida stars as a young wannabe gangster tough girl, just released from reform school. She tracks down one of her classmates fathers, who runs an auto repair shop that the local Yakuza are trying to force out of business and take over, and starts working for him. At the same time a recently released from prison, and now ill Yakuza is trying to make a new life for himself and his girl, a friend of Reiko's, who also just graduated from reform school. A fateful car crash brings the two on a collision course with each other and the brutal Yakuza clan, which can only end bloody vengeance.