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6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
One of the best Japanese TV series' of the 1990's, 1 August 2003
Author:
Glenn Giffen from Toronto, Canada
Writer Yoshikazu Okada's best work to date, he weaves a skillful mix of
drama and humour around the homey but real characters who gather in a
small
beachside B&B. In the opening scenes, director Rieko Ishizaka reveals
her
artistic pretensions through her use of an unsteady handycam and weird
saturated colours to set off the flashbacks of our two young heroes,
Hiromi
Sakurai (Takashi Sorimachi) and Kaito Suzuki (Yutaka Takenouchi). The
freeloading Hiromi has been kicked out by his girlfriend Fujiko (Kaori
Tsuji), and ends up in a police parking garage after sleeping in his
illegally parked tiny white 1985 Renault. Meanwhile, the rich and
successful Kaito stands on his rooftop patio, stinging from his loss of a
major client for the huge multinational trading company where he works.
The
two head for the sea, and meet for the first time when Kaito spots Hiromi
pushing the same Renault in search of a gas station. They end up
crashing
onto the beach next to the Diamondhead B&B run by aging ex-surfer Masaru
Izumi (guitarist Mike Maki) and his granddaughter the cute but boyish
Makoto
(Ryoko Hirosue). Hiromi is hired as help, but Kaito having lost his
wallet
in the crash, is forced to share the servants' room. The straight-laced
Kaito, having lived his whole life by the rules, is at first annoyed by
the
nonstop chatter of happy-go-lucky Hiromi, but their constant bickering
slowly grows into an increasingly strong but unacknowledged friendship,
that
eventually pulls Kaito out of his work-centred life, and away from his
almost too perfect co-worker/girlfriend, Sakura (Yuuki
Akimoto).
Okada's expert pen captures well the excitement and hardships of
travelling
in the summer as a youth. B&B owner Masaru, his long gray hair in a
ponytail, strums the hauntingly beautiful instrumental "Suiheisen
(Surface
of the water)" on his guitar while his guests and friends sit around an
open
fire barbecuing meat on the beach. Neighbour Haruko (Izumi Inamori) runs
a
beachside bar which is mostly empty. The pleasing echo of chimes, the
crashing of the waves, and the near deafening chirp of Japan's
everpresent
cicadas mark the time and place as unmistakably summer on a country
beach.
Each episode also touches on deeper themes. One of the main ones is the
conflict between ambition, material success and the attractions of the
city
versus the slower pace of life but close-knit and comfortable community
found in the country. People from the city make occasional forays to try
to
bring Kaito back to reality, but they often find themselves swayed by the
same warm and gentle charm they find. Like Kaito, many of the other
characters are searching for where they are meant to be as they are
pushed
and pulled by the ties of family, their own desires and the forces of
circumstance.
With very strong performances from all the principals, tight writing,
excellent direction, and the wonderfully varied soundtrack of Satoshi
Takebe, it is hard to recommend this drama enough.
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