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

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

Showing posts with label Karina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karina. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

PRICELESS Sono yōna koto wa arimasen!




2012 Fuji-TV 10-episode JDo that starred Kimura Takuya as Kindaichi Fumio, a quirky, fast-talking, and seemingly oblivious salary man who tends to ignore his surroundings while also remembering every, last thing that went on around him, including knowing everyone's name and what department they're from, when is their birthday, and pertinent yet irrelevant office info about things like sick family members currently recovering in a hospital.


At the start of this fast-paced, auctioneer-style dialogue drama, our Fumio is king of the hill, and then the next day he is falsely accused, fired, stripped of his credit/cash, and watches his apartment blow up before his very eyes - leaving him destitute.

Fumio spends the night in a park and meets new, interesting characters, treating them the very same way he had his co-workers and associates. He learns how to survive without money, meets two young boys who take him to their grandmother's house, and the old lady insists that Fumio can stay as long as he promises to make the 500y a day she asks for to cover his room/board.


It isn't long before his boss and a young woman from the accounting department end up in the same boat with Fumio and have to earn the same 500y to stay with Fumio in the tiny room he and now they rent.


Karina is Nikaido Saya, the genius accountant, and Nakai Kiichi as Moai Kengo, their boss - department head, actually, a man who disappears in a crowd and is overlooked by the people standing right next to him.





The real boss - wicked heir to the Miracle Thermos Company - is Fujiki Naohito as Oyashiki Toichiro.

Toichiro has a grudge against Fumio, and while we know episode after episode why he's angry, we aren't really allowed to know the truth of the matter until near the end. In realistic honesty, though, it is easy to figure out what the real deal is almost instantly, and it is our adorable Fumio who must be made to suffer right up to the bitter end before finding out just why it was he had to go through so much hell on account of the jealous and vengeful Toichiro.


This was a comedy start to finish, and a tension-based bit of romance between Fumio and Saya that needed 10 episodes to sputter and cough its way to practically nothing at the very end, but trust me when I say THAT WASN'T A SPOILER!


I also can't help thinking that their names are a play on their names.


Kimura Takuya as Kindaichi Fumio - Nakai Kiichi as Moai Kengo - Natsuki Mari as Marioka Ichirin - Renbutsu Misako as Hirose Yoko - Fujigaya Taisuke as Enomoto Kotaro - Masu Takeshi as Fujisawa Takeshi - Karina as Nikaido Saya - 
Fujiki Naohito as Oyashiki Toichiro - Maeda Oshiro as Marioka Kanta - 
Issey Ogata as Zaizen Osamu - Tanaka Kanau as Marioka Ryota - Nakamura Atsuo as Oyashiki Iwao

They are weird names even if it isn't obvious they are weird names, but as I kept looking at them, I began to notice a slight pattern and wonder if it is true or just another of my far-reaching and pointless self-imposed coincidental mind games giving me more grief than is actually necessary.




This is 10 episodes of funny meant to show us just how amazing Fumio is so that we can believe it when he eventually returns to the top of the manufacturing, friend-making, and trust-building heap he was tossed from in episode 1.



I appreciated the other-world qualities that were sprinkled throughout while keeping just enough of Tokyo around so that I became logically confused and easily transported to this other realm I knew had to be Tokyo and yet it wasn't, really ... or at least it didn't seem like it ... sometimes.



I rarely EVER mention soundtracks in my blogs because it isn't often that they impress me, or that I am even able to remember what the songs or running theme song was, but not with Priceless: No Such Thing.

They relied on both The Stones and Sato Naoki for background ambiance, and I appreciated it, thank you very much.


Each time the gang met at a local bar, a Rolling Stones song played quietly in the background, taking me down memory lane and making me smile.


They put the leads in that small, old television with rabbit ears, too, and had them portray each member of the Stones. It was original and cool.


And Kimura-kun continued to smirk every so often even when it wasn't necessary or no one said anything funny. I adore it, that quirky habit of his, and I hope he continues with it until he stops acting altogether.


I asked myself, too, again and again as I watched Priceless if it wasn't simply because of Kimura-kun that I enjoyed the story line, the characters, the rapid-fire dialogue, and even the ganbatte stuff littered throughout.


I attempted to put other actors in his place, and I tried to imagine myself reading the book instead, too. Maybe for some the only draw would be Kimura-kun or even Naohito-san that made them watch a to z, but not me. They were extra whipped cream with two cherries on top and nothing more, because I liked the story regardless.

Friday, January 17, 2014

Summer Nude




2013 11-episode Fuji TV drama that starred Yamashita Tomohisa as Mikuriya Asahi, a latent photographer living in a seaside town (Chiba) who arrives to photograph a wedding when at the last second, the groom bails.

Asahi runs into the bride, Karina as Chiyohara Natsuki, a popular and talented chef. Through trial and error, Asahi manages to talk Natsuki into visiting his sleepy little hamlet without officially explaining that he'd like her to take over a beach restaurant that caters to bathers and drinkers.

Natsuki has a no-nonsense personality and it would seem as if she sticks her nose in everyone's business, but that inability to keep quiet and let things be ends up having a huge impact on the town's residents - and Asahi.


In between her meddling is a lot of personal trial/error and self-sacrifice among the locals to include love triangles, love at first sight, latent affection, and lost love.

It's a romance drama as far as Asian romance goes.

Asahi is carrying a 3-year old torch for a girl who walked away.
A girl he grew up with has carried a torch for Asahi for 10 years.
A boy who likes to read and is very standoffish is secretly in love with that girl.
Asahi's close friend is in love with every woman he meets.

I can't, really go into any amount of detail with this one because no matter what I say, it will be giving away too much.

I can tell you, though, that I could only find this at GoodDrama.net, which sucked huge time. And then the subs were astronomically, abusively, insanely awful.

I started to get a headache, they were that bad.












But then a miracle happened





8th Sin showed up to save the day, bless his or her heart.

He/she still made a few errors, 




I can't read Japanese at all, and the gray subs at the top weren't much help, but at least I could read a majority of what the actors were saying - even knowing as I do - that a lot of times that isn't quite true. What I'm reading and what they're saying are far from identical.

Still, it was a thousand times better than the first two episodes, so I was happy.





For the first, few episodes we are taken mostly on Asahi's journey even though Natsuki got dumped on her wedding day at the very beginning.
It wasn't so much about that as it was about she and he coming together to transform the seaside residents.

This was another of the creative Japanese writer dramas that managed to take me on a wonderful trip to someplace other than Tokyo and introduce me to people I'd like to hang out with on that beach and in that town.

I was content, though, to sit in the wings and just watch as they struggled through their dilemmas one by one until everything came together near the end.

It was the type of story where you know, deep down in your heart, that people like this just don't exist in real life and never will. There was just too much camaraderie and soul-searching, wisdom beyond their years, and accurate second-guessing about what everyone else was feeling to make this a realistic, believable scenario.

They are the kinds of people you wish you had at your side when you need them most - the true friend - who steers you in the right direction whether your realize it or want them to or not.

If stuff like this actually happens in your life, then that's awesome and I envy you to infinity.

Love is great, but it can wait.
That might be how you feel now, but something better is waiting in the wings.
You deserve much more than this.
You say you love me, but I can tell by the look in your eyes ...

Yeah, right, whatever.

Hindsight can never be foresight, and yet these dramas sometimes make me think it could actually happen - mind reading, predicting the future, and knowing even more about what someone needs, is thinking, or wants than even they do.

Um ~ no.

I think I've said this before, but, we could all use a script writer in our heads to guide us through life.

Too bad that will never happen.





I like these types of dramas, though, and for that very reason. Sometimes it's okay to escape reality and look at things from a fantastic perspective. Especially when you get to have the added advantage of dreamy, hot lead actors as a foundation for those fantasies.

I often wonder, too, about the leading ladies and how they feel when their manager calls them up to say they have been offered a part and will star alongside someone as classy, now, and handsome as Tomo.

Then she gets the script and finds out there's a kissing scene somewhere along the line.

(heaven) - Or awkward, maybe?

I'm sure they'll tell us how professional they are, and that it isn't like kissing a real guy or their lover.

Yeah, right. Mmm hmm.

There was humor in this drama, too, and a sideline story that confused the heck out of me with its inconclusive reason for even existing, but I didn't mind that it was there to ... distract us?





Which brings me back to what I was saying earlier about the lack of sex, touching, romance in these so-called romantic dramas/movies from Asia.

It's a-okay to flip the bird in a 13+ rating film, but don't you dare stand this close to the opposite sex, touch too soon, and God forbid you show your real emotions by grabbing the girl and planting your tongue about three feet down her throat, either.

I've decided its about time I got real serious here and started watching their porn.

I can't bring myself to do it, though. But, jeez am I curious to know how they procreate over there after having sat through years and years and YEARS of these silly, nonsensical, sappy, melodramatic, angst-ridden, cold-fish, unaffectionate so-called LOVE stories!





I also walked away with the feeling that Karina is seriously shy or extremely unsure of herself on and off screen. I've seen her in other dramas, and she exudes the same apprehensive qualities every time. It's not all character acting as far as I'm concerned.

She was dead-set on giving up her chef career to settle down and raise a family, which would indicate some amount of compassion, caring, and warmth on the part of this 'character', and yet it just wasn't there, and it never is. She's always tough, mouthy, and inapproachable. But she did a great job as Natsuki.

I gave this 5 pika's because of Tomo-kun, the story line, the setting, the co-stars, and the general theme. I liked this one a whole lot.




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