Hanzawa Naoki (TV Mini Series 2013– ) Poster

(2013– )

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7/10
A modern Samurai-like drama on revenge to protect humanity
Kicino16 October 2013
This is said to be the most popular TV drama in Japan in recent years. After watching the whole series of 10 episodes, I kind of understand why it is so popular.

For one thing, it helps all the suffering salary men in Japan who work hard to say what they want to but are afraid to say. It helps the repressed to voice.

Secondly, it values the hardworking small enterprises which went out of business since the bubble burst in Japan. They are the people who actually produce goods instead of playing number games and making our assets evaporate.

In a fast changing and finance-oriented society, Hanzawa brings back what we once lost – care for fellow human in his capacity no matter who they are.

I would not say it is first class but it is very worth watching. More observation:

• It is like a Japanese period drama – with all the important people marching and turning at corners and then a shogun – the branch head. Then all the tricks and treats and allies. It is the same in the old days or now, in Japan or in China.

• It is also like a samurai drama where Hanzawa is defending his own pride, not loyalty to his shogun, but to his father's human philosophy, which makes it more appealing to the audience, even if they are not in banking.

• There seems to be a lot of group pressure – from above to the lower ranking salary men so that life is tough even only for survival. You have to be so careful of what you do and what you say, even for the wives too who had to gather with other wives: a lot of hypocrisy in the sense that they look harmonious but lots of masking and competition within. It will tougher if you want to survive with dignity and pride, not to mention your sense of achievement.

• Ranking is extremely important in the company and within the wives. Lots of pressure to conform to various rule and customs.

• Hence cohort support is very strong when they had to fight against this ranking system.

• Marriage and work life seems to be very different: men usually do not talk about work at home. There seems to be lots of secrets (many unnecessary) among couples and hence they cannot vent and might develop into many possible illness. A crook can be such a loving father. Hence the men are under a lot of pressure in Japan when he is the sole bread earner and he cannot vent even at home. No wonder they died earlier.

• All the wives (except Owada's) are very supportive and understanding even though they do not know what their husband do at work. There is much to learn from them!

• At least in this drama, all deeds are very instrumental – all action are in exchange for something else – except for help among cohorts. Even presents from wife Hana was kind of a repay for his hardwork. Where is the unconditional giving and love?

• The crooks are too one-dimensional. I am sure they are also human on one side which would make the story more convincing.

• Hanzawa is confrontational, which is the exact opposite of the traditional Japanese upbringing of harmony. Maybe it is challenging the Japanese tradition, and bringing out lots of unfulfilled desires among Japanese salary men thus they all love it.

• In terms of the script, in every episode there is a little surprise with new information. It works like a suspense movie where it naturally draws your attention and you cannot let go.

• It seems the Japanese value long-term relationships very much: cohort, the reporter from Osaka, the enemy. They have good memories of people who are nice or nasty to them and they act accordingly. So do not mess with them! If you are nice to them, they will be nice to you and vice versa. On that point I am similar!

• Everyone seems to dread transfer. But at least you are still under payroll and in a multinational corporation, working as an expat receive special allowance and is seen as a ladder to career advancement unless you are transferred to some remote area and would not learn anything new, like in ancient China. But then many great literature was written when the author was transferred to these remote areas.

Teruyuki Kagawa, who played Ohwada, is an excellent actor compared to Masato Sakai who played Hanzawa. They have worked together in Key of Life (2012) and in that movie, the difference is even more obvious. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2078599/reviews-1
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8/10
Hanzawa - brief
user-142-63262529 November 2014
Who'd have thought corporate banking shenanigans could be so entertaining? Hanzawa and his loan section are nudged by higher ups to approve a shady loan totaling millions. Before you can say something smells fishy, the account goes bankrupt, and execs throw all blame on Hanzawa. One thing they don't reckon with is his tenacity, his skills in following the money, and the dark vengeance that drives him. Traps launch out of nowhere and enemies hateful and cunning circle like jackals. Foes learn - screw with Hanzawa, and it's double payback! No killings - no shootings - no nudity. Ratings smash across Asia. Highly addicting.
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8/10
Love and hate him
madbird-6124319 September 2019
I am following the male lead since after legal high, and is simply addicted to him since i read his story to his stardom. I am a very biased person and once I am addicted to am actor, I would see his drama no matter what.

Male lead belongs to the stage. His exaggerated kind of acting suits perfectly the role of lawyer in legal high, but not in this drama.

Other than that, the drama is ok in other aspects, plot, acting of supporting actors, story twist.
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6/10
Started great, then became too revengeful
Glue2Screen30 September 2022
Both great and disappointing at same time.

The first half of season 1 was amazingly captivating. Ramped up pressure, underdog struggle, battle of wits and scheming. This got my attention then held it until 3am in the morning.

As much as I was excited, the second half of season 1 was a great disappointment. It reuses the same plot as the first half season 1 (just with different characters and companies). The entire atmosphere felt unnecessary revengeful and fueled with hate. Hanzawa's dire need to have revenge and his constant mad expressions got real old real fast. I expected Hanzawa to rise above and become that change in banking he himself stated in the first half of season one but he selfishly chased revenge to the uttermost.

Hoping season 2 would deviate from this formula

6.5/10.
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4/10
Gets boring and convoluted really fast
TooKakkoiiforYou_32122 April 2024
I don't understand why people rave so much about this series in the first place. Yes, the main male lead is a very good actor, yes the first part is mildly entertaining - albeit not entertaining as the first Legal High season - and it flows generally well, but the second part gets uberconvoluted, repetitious and boring in the incredible span of TWO EPISODES that I watched during the morning time after sleeping yet they induced me into a sleeping coma nonetheless. After watching a 50-episodes long tokusatsu that didn't bore me once, two episodes of the second half of this J-Drama were enough to put me to sleep. If you're interested in giving Masato Sakai a try get the first season - not the dreadful second one - of Legal High and it should suffice.
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