google.com, pub-1996401214588839, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Asian Drama Queen: Fukuyama Masaharu

The Queen of Asian Drama is Back with more Irreverent Reviews and Snarky Commentary.

Showing posts with label Fukuyama Masaharu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fukuyama Masaharu. Show all posts

Sunday, August 01, 2010

Tengoku no Daisuke e / 天国のダイスケへ


To Daisuke in Heaven ~ Hakone Ekiden ga Musunda Kizuna ~



2003 Japanese movie based on the real-life dilemma of a college student on a relay track team whose promising future is cut short by leukemia.

The movie, however, is based on the personal life of an arrogant reporter who covered his sports career and who ended up changing his outlook on life as a result of his having met the young boy with such spirit and drive.

Sato Daisuke (Oguri Shun) is the determined twenty-three year old on the track team who wants desperately to win a relay marathon their school hasn't participated in in over thirteen years.

Yohei Iida, (Fukuyama Masaharu), is the cynical and selfish reporter for a prominent newspaper read around the country, and because he refuses to accept the help of his co-workers, he ends up making a huge mistake that costs him is Political Reporter position at the paper, thus relegating him to the 'useless' and 'unworthy of being called news' sports department.

Iida's first assignment is at Takushoku University, where he is asked to cover the relay marathon race, and it isn't long after he first meets Daisuke that the stiff reporter begins to come undone.

He has a boat-load of life lessons to learn at his age, and it isn't, entirely ironic that a majority of those lessons are learned from a boy ten years his junior.

Stories like this make me wonder if it isn't, perhaps true that God actually selects certain people to a call to greatness through another, less fortunate soul.

I mean - why can't stuff like this happen to everyone who needs it?

Wouldn't that make this a better world in which to live?

Like, why only Iida and not someone else if he isn't the only pathetic soul wandering around at a total loss and clueless to the reality that is his actual existence?

Anyhow, this movie was heart-wrenching while not being overly dramatic about it, and it was an interesting story about interesting characters without it being in-your-face lecture series about the contrasts of right versus wrong.

I liked it, and I love Oguri Shun, too.




Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Galileo / ガリレオ

Uso wo tsuku, nazo wo toku / See through the lies, solve crimes




2007, 10-episode, Fuji TV mystery drama about a guy deemed 'Tantei Galileo' (though the subbers chose to say 'weirdo Galileo' for whatever reason.

Yukawa Sensei (Fukuyama Masaharu) is a physics professor and a genius, and while he insists the only thing that interests him is proving or disproving theories, he ends up helping the local police to solve mysteries every time one crops up in their detective work.

Each episode pits him against a rookie, female detective who was introduced to the genius by her former colleague before he is transferred to another precinct.

She's really pretty, but it didn't seem like she noticed or cared.
Her job came first, and she was overly anxious to make a good impression on her boss and new partner, too.

Personally, I think Yukawa Sensei noticed her right away, but that his personality prevented anything from cooking (or even to simmer) for the duration, since 'ai', to him, is completely illogical and does not compute.




Every episode brings a new case with a new set of circumstances that baffle police and intrigue Yukawa while it also annoys his older assistant, who continuously insists that the police go away and let Sensei do his natural job, which is to teach at the university and conduct experiments.

In reality, Fukuyama is closer to my age, but in the drama, he not only captivated my heart, he also came off as a stud-muffin to all the giddy college chicks who attended his lectures because of the kawaii factor and not for the content of his brain.

For a welcome change, this is based on a novel that won a serious prize for literature, and the quality of the writing comes through in every, single episode.

It also ranked high in viewer satisfaction in Japan, which comes as no surprise, either.

The only problem I had was in picturing him as a JPop idol.

I'll seriously dig into his profile, listen to some of his tunes, and get back to you with my thoughts on that.

When the 10 episodes were through, there was an added treat in the form of a 'movie', or two-episode addition that in-depth explained how Yukawa Sensei came to be a much-needed addition to the detective division of the local police.

~ After that came another movie, titled Suspect X ~



This was well-received in Japan, with thousands flocking to the theater in the first, few weeks of its release -

Over here, it seems to have received less than favorable reviews - but, I think I know why -

It wasn't that this was a bad movie, a stupid addition, or even a sloppy afterthought meant to keep the momentum going.

What happened with Suspect X was that there was little tongue-in-cheek dialogue or silly bickering between Yukawa Sensei and the frustrated, female detective.

It wasn't at all like the comedy within a series of serious murder mysteries one came to expect with the drama, but as far as I'm concerned, that is totally beside the point.

I also got the impression Suspect X was meant to give the viewer Yukawa Sensei's final word on the 'ai' theory - yet, at the very end, it remained as ambiguous as he turned out to be.




Seriously recommend this one, and it will be in the top-ten, end-of-the-year list for me, too.


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