Let's Play: Date a Drama (Melody Edition) - Français
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- Titre original: ハコヅメ ~交番女子の逆襲~
- Aussi connu sous le nom de: Hakozume Tatakau! Kouban Joshi , Hakozume: Koban Joshi no Gyakushu , Packed Up: A Police Box Woman's Counterattack , Hakozume: Tatakau! Koban Joshi
- Réalisateur: Sugawara Shintaro, Nagumo Seiichi
- Scénariste: Nemoto Nonji
- Genres: Mystère, Comédie, Vie quotidienne
Distribution et équipes
- Nagano MeiKawai MaiRôle principal
- Toda ErikaFuji Seiko/"Mountain Mesu Gorilla"Rôle principal
- Muro TsuyoshiIgasaki Shuichi [Commander of Machiyama police box]Rôle Secondaire
- Miura ShoheiMinamoto Seiji/"Moja" [Detective]Rôle Secondaire
- Yamada YukiYamada Takeshi [Detective]Rôle Secondaire
- Nishino NanaseMakitaka Miwa [Detective]Rôle Secondaire
Critiques
Kawaiiii Pervenche
Des duos de flics, on en a eu et on en aura encore tant que les séries et les scénaristes en manque d'inspiration existeront. Mais comment bouder notre plaisir avec en rookie Nagano Mei et en vieux (si on peut dire) briscard confirmé, Toda Erika, deux stars, ayant déjà eu leur Asadora rien qu'à elles, mais surtout habituées des comédies légères, mais souvent efficaces.Ma petite chouchoute, Nagano Mei retrouve également le fantasque Muro Tsuyoshi pour la soutenir, au point de reprendre son rôle de papa poule. Mais son personnage reste très secondaire par rapport au père surprotecteur et de fait beaucoup moins drôle de Oya Baka Seishun Hakusho. C'est vraiment Toda Erika, par son jeu et son statue de senpai/grande sœur/maman, envers Mei qui donne du charme à cette Arme Fatale des Koubans.
Vous découvrirez donc la vie trépidante des policiers de quartier japonais, chargés d'indiquer le chemin aux personnes âgées et de retrouver qui à fait tomber le bonzaï devant la porte. Rien de nouveau, peut être, car tant de mangas en ont tiré les traits et vu l'ambiance générale de la série, on est certainement en face d'une adaptation (que je n'ai pas lu, évidemment).
Mais vous n'êtes tout de même pas devant un gag-manga de plus. Car malgré l'humour omniprésent, insufflé par le jeu de Mei et Erika, mais aussi des seconds couteaux, flics masculins, c'est beaucoup d'émotion, aussi, qui est distillé dans ce feuilleton. Juste recrutée comme elle le dit elle-même, un peu par hasard, chez les flics. Son rêve de défendre le citoyen va se transformer rapidement en cauchemar tant elle semble éloigné des attentes du métier.
En réalité le scénario cache (mal) quelques secrets qui va changer sa vision du métier, mais surtout sa vie d'adulte, qu'elle apprend à gérer grâce à son mentor un peu trop envahissant. Notre Jeune Marie Pervenche (je me demande si Daniele Évenou ne serait pas une inspiration , d'ailleurs, au moins pour les cheveux) sera très entourées. Notamment dans son minuscule appart, transformant la série en Sitcom, mais toujours à la japonaise. C'est-à-dire avec les bons conseils du Senpai à son disciple pour la faire progresser, malgré les litre d'lcool bus à chaque scène. Le personnage de Mei, un peu trop Candide pourra énerver, mais elle le joue tellement bien. Pas vraiment de scénario à dévoilé car peu évolué, sans être une comédie qui vous fera pisser de rire comme Oya Baka, elle vous détendra après une dure journée de labeure. Un conseil, au producteur, une séquelle réunissant le duo Yamada Yuki, Miura Shohei en personnages principaux pourrait faire son effet, car c'est la bonne surprise de ce drama. Après la déception, Nishino Nanase et Muro Tsuyoshi largement sous exploités, voir transparents.
Bien sûr, on termine et on commence même, une fois n'est pas coutume par un Opening digne d'un (bon) anime punchy à souhait et surtout par un Ending tubesque interpréter par la Sia japonaise, Milet que j'adore. De quoi se mettre de bonne humeur malgré la prune sur le pare-brise de la voiture.
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Unboxing Kawai
Before the show even really starts, Kawai’s resignation letter ends up in the trash and Fuji just picks it up like a Fami-Chiki chicken wrapper. That one simple gesture is basically the entire plot in a single beat. Fuji literally picks up Kawai and refuses to let her walk away from herself, which is the exact kind of aggressive support I live for. Kawai is seconds from quitting for good. She has been grinding away at the police box for who knows how long and it shows. Physically and mentally she is running on empty. No one seems to notice her and she has never felt appreciated even though she is supposedly the one keeping the neighborhood safe. On top of that the job itself feels meaningless most days, just a constant, unglamorous grind with zero reward. Then comes the absolute peak of the show where she finally snaps and screams that she wants a boyfriend just like in the manga Tsundere Senior and Spoiled Childhood Friend's Chin-up Battle. It is so ridiculous and entirely her. Fuji’s calm, deadpan presence right next to her makes the whole scene twice as funny. Nagano Mei completely inhabits that specific brand of exhausted, awkward charm. I am especially obsessed with Kawai’s police sketches because they are equal parts atrocious, hilarious, and cute. They look like something a very stressed child would draw while hiding under a desk yet they somehow capture the essence of the suspects in the most cursed way possible.Fuji is the perfect anchor for all that mess. Toda Erika is flawless as the ultimate romanceless Robocop and I am obsessed with her steady presence. It turns out she did not actually get punted down to the police box as some kind of punishment. She went there with a mission, hunting for the hit-and-run culprit that has been haunting her, and she kept that secret buried deep until Kawai finally stumbled onto the truth. It makes her character feel so much sharper knowing she was operating on this hidden level the whole time. She does not waste a single second on fake motivational speeches. She just exists next to Kawai and shows her how to survive the grind through sheer competence and perfectly timed deadpan comments that hit like a ton of bricks. I loved how Fuji pushed her into things. She handed Kawai awkward social situations and responsibilities she clearly felt unready for but it never felt like bullying. Watching Kawai flail through conversations or botch tiny tasks while Fuji just stood there with that unshakeable stare was pure comedy gold. Every lesson was quiet and embedded in the chaos of the day-to-day. It felt like a much snappier, more grounded version of a Gintama mentor dynamic where the lesson is just about not dying while filing paperwork.
What really makes the show feel alive is the supporting cast. Muro Tsuyoshi as Commander Igasaki is the perfect mix of ridiculous authority and familiar presence. Miura Shohei’s Minamoto, or Moja, brings that weary detective energy that feels earned. Yamada Yuki, Nishino Nanase, and Fuchino Yuto slide into the space seamlessly. They create a police box that feels lived in. None of them are flashy or stealing focus. They just make the office feel real like personalities rubbing against each other and surviving the grind together. It is a nine-episode sprint but it never feels rushed or thin. The show knows exactly how long it wants to sit in this space. Every episode feels used, like time spent rather than time passed. The chemistry between Kawai and Fuji in that tiny office is the only thing that mattered. The station looks messy because it is messy. It smells like paperwork and stale coffee and resignation. Their bickering never feels mean-spirited, just familiar. It is two people who realized the world is a disaster and they were the only ones standing between the paperwork and the public. Kawai does not suddenly become a superhero. She just learns how to occupy her own space because Fuji trusted her to hold it together even when she was panicking. Her awkwardness becomes part of her charm and Fuji’s quiet guidance makes it feel like a safe, lived-in space to stumble.
I loved how the show ended right back where it started, sitting in the box and complaining about the never-ending pile of work. It is so fitting because the job is still a thankless grind and the coffee is still stale but everything has changed for Kawai. She is still venting but she is not looking for the exit anymore. She has been saved from that initial despair and she is finally exactly where she needs to be. The production itself is modest and that is exactly why it works. No shiny sets or dramatic lighting, just a lived-in, slightly messy station that feels real. That simplicity lets the characters breathe and makes the quiet, goofy moments hit harder. This is a show that trusts its small scale to carry everything and it is so charming for it. I finished it feeling like I had spent time somewhere small and human with people I genuinely liked. Kawai's slow growth alongside Fuji's steady guidance, combined with the ensemble’s grounded presence and those cursed sketches, turned everyday boredom into something warm and funny.
Fuji picking Kawai’s resignation letter out of the trash literally saves her, while Fuji’s own presence at the box is revealed as a secret mission to find a hit-and-run culprit. Kawai is exhausted and hilariously human, punctuated by her boyfriend breakdown and her atrocious yet cute police sketches. Nagano Mei and Toda Erika anchor the show with perfect chemistry, supported by a lived-in ensemble that makes the police box feel alive. Nine episodes, tight and deliberate, small scale, and charmingly awkward. The ending brings them full circle back to the box, still complaining about the work, but showing that Kawai has finally found her place and is staying for good.
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