The Honest Realtor

正直不動産 ‧ Drama ‧ 2022
Completed
pash
1 people found this review helpful
Jun 27, 2022
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 2
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.0
This "Shoujiki Fudousan" was an entertaining watch altogether, with some good points and some minor problems though. All imho, as always.

First things first, what I've liked:

- The story was a clean one, with a nicely proper, ethical message (exactly what I would expect from an NHK production, and that was comforting in itself ^__-)
- The female cast was very good; I'm quite a fan of Fukuhara Haruka so I knew I was gonna get a great performance from her, but also Kurashina Kana and Daichi Mao were great, not to mention the lovely Izumi Rika!)
- The music and the "packaging" were totally OK too

On to the things I wasn't enthusiastic about:

- The male cast; I must confess not being a big fan of Yamashita Tomohisa, but I'll say this: he still was, like, the only male who gets a passing grade here, imho; the rest were all below par (though in all fairness, I couldn't say how much of that was the actors' own fault and how much actually depended on the script - I'm willing to give the actors the benefit of the doubt and blame it on the scriptwriter and/or on the original manga authors
- The hair stylists; this is a problem this drama shares with many other J-dramas adapted from a manga: crazy hairstyles that work on paper get too faithfully portrayed in the live-action, resulting simply too weird; take for example this drama's villain, he was supposed to be scary and all, but due to the hairstyle being a kinda mix between Elvis and a Leningrad Cowboy, the guy ended up looking just ridiculous, imho. (oh, and that hairstyle on Kurashina Kana was a crime against humanity, seriously...T_____T)

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Completed
Bhavna
0 people found this review helpful
Aug 2, 2025
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10
This review may contain spoilers

To be honest and open hearted in a cruel and callous world

This show really opened my eyes. On the surface, it’s a funny, comedic series about this real estate agent, formerly known as “Liar Nagase” and how an incident causes him to be blessed (although he says cursed) with the Spirit that blows through him whenever he is tempted to lie, and forces the truth out of him. He starts off as a lying, manipulative realtor that will do or say anything to get a contract, including all of its bells and whistles. Turns out he learned this from a former employee Kamiki, who taught him all the manipulative techniques to become number 1 at any cost. Tosaka Real Estate where Nagase works, along with its rival Minerva use this ranking system that pits salespeople against each other for some competition where the #1 salesperson for the month gets serious perks. Minerva is all around scammy and will go to any level to get money and contracts, but meanwhile Tosaka has a little more ethic- especially since Nagase’s Spirit blessing of honesty started, he starts to inspire others such as Tsukishita who is his younger female coworker who is open hearted, polite, people pleasing, and earnest. The series shows how this spirit of honesty and inner alignment with truth changes Nagase’s perspective on life, where he used to live for money, the flashy high rise life, hooking up with random women, and the number 1 sales spot, but now sees something more important than the number 1 spot, which is bringing joy to others, which makes him happy. He starts to feel for the first time a sense of happiness and meaning in his job, whereas before it was just a cold, hard game. His approach even softens the heart of Kamiki, his number 1 rival when Kamiki starts working for Minerva and becomes a villainous rival of sorts for Nagase. It’s like Nagase is battling his own former self or shadow, and sheds light on Kamiki’s obsession with #1 being an armor of protection and a way coping for immense grief and pain he hides inside. Kamiki was a fascinating character, and when his backstory was explained, I was in tears. All villains are hiding great pain, and if it was only allowed to process instead of the ego taking over and creating a mask where they felt powerless, there could be healing and restoration of the soul. But if it is given to the ego, then it creates this hardened, insensitive, manipulative mask, a false self and a shell in place of the suffering victim which becomes a dangerous force. In fact, all the unprocessed pain in the world creates this callous, harsh world and atmosphere that you see in the series. And Nagase along with Tsukishita become like beacons of light in such a world. Once you get past the grief inside, you find the joy of Spirit deep within, that radiates throughout the world. The title song “So far so good” by Kazumasa Oda that plays at the end of every episode is so touching and heartwarming. It really speaks to the healing and joy of Spirit that is brought to everyone at the end of the day when honesty and genuine intentions are extended to all.

As far as performances go, I grew to really love the guy who played Nagase (Tomoshima Yamashita)- at first I wasn’t used to his face, and he just looked like a total a-hole, but then as he went through this honest transformation by the spirit, I found him to be more and more attractive. Then I looked him up and I realized he was the naked dude in Alice in Boderland! Ohhh it makes sense now! In the second season they changed his haircut and he gained weight, so he was definitely not as attractive as the first season. He had more of a dad look in the second season lol. But his character was solid. I loved Tsukishita- she was so sweet and innocent, and when I would go out into the world and encounter mean and horrible people, I would remember her and her smile and it would make me feel better- like there is some light and kindness in this world. Kamiki was my other favorite- his charisma was off the charts, even though his tap dancing was strange and comical- it was very “anime” like for a villain so I thought that was cool too. His backstory was so sad and it gave him more depth as a character especially when seeing his grief and his transformation towards the end, where he questions everything- his philosophy and so even the unbeatable villain has this soft spot where he is humbled and brought to his knees. It was sweet to see the end where it showed that he could change too.

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Completed
Kenseiden
0 people found this review helpful
Sep 25, 2022
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 7.5
Rewatch Value 8.0

Vendeur, menteur

Le mensonge et la mauvaise foi semblent être devenu aujourd'hui l'outil indispensable pour gagner tous les combats. Jusque dans la réalité la plus horrible, quand un dirigeant ment en regardant le monde dans les yeux, il arrive à convaincre, même ses plus féroces opposants, qu'il a peut-être raison. Dans cette ambiance détestable dans lequel l'être humain vie aujourd'hui, il reste des médias qui cherchent encore à mettre des principes de vie, qui paraissent probablement désuets, en avant, par des dramas sans prétention, pourtant tellement indispensables actuellement. La NHK fait ce qu'on attend d'elle pour une télévision publique. Elle nous fait vibrer et réfléchir sur les valeurs d'honnêteté, de compassion et d'engagement avec ce Shoujiki Fudosan, où tout est déjà dit dans le titre.

En effet, le pitch tient sur un timbre-poste (il y en a encore au Japon, heureusement). Un agent immobilier, obsédé par l'argent, ment à ses clients, ses conquêtes et tout son entourage pour faire du chiffre et vivre la belle vie de riche célibataire. Un jour, il se voit dans l'incapacité de mentir. Si bien que, les 10 épisodes de ce drama vont se transformer en leçon de vie, quasi bouddhique. L'honnêteté paye toujours, on le dit bien. Mais cela va mettre du temps à venir. Loin d'être une sinécure, la NHK nous montre bien à quel point le monde des agences immobilières ressemble à celui des Yakuzas. On découvre un système mafieux incarné par le grand méchant de l'histoire. Celui-ci, voulant conquérir les autres agences immobilières. Mais surtout, ses petites sociétés, sont chacune dépeintes comme des clans de Yakuzas, prêtes à foncer sur leurs victimes, les clients, en les embobinant. C'est là qu'est toute la force de ces dramas pédagogiques. Même si c'est une adaptation de manga, pleine de clichés et de "what's the fuck", très clairement, le but principal de la série est d'alerter tous ceux qui doivent passer par une agence pour vendre, acheter ou louer. Les coups fourrés sont nombreux, mais des panneaux informatifs apparaissent à chaque scène en face à face client x agent pour expliquer tous les termes techniques. On connait le procédé, mais on apprécie toujours.

Bien sûr, on est en face d'un énième feel good drama. Tout fini toujours bien ou presque. Cependant, on en a vraiment besoin ses derniers temps. Car les situations dépeintes, de personnes réellement dans la merde, après des mauvais conseils ou de la malhonnêteté, on en connait tous. Les émissions françaises où l'on fait semblant de régler les problèmes des gents dans le besoin, à coup de grande gueule, n'ont pas un 100e de classe de ses dramas. La vulgarité etn face de la finesse japonaise. Certains diront la japoniaiserie, pas moi. Bien qu'on pourra regretter la pauvreté du scénario renvoyant à Liar Liar un film qui a maintenant une trentaine d'années. Mais soyons honnêtes, les acteurs et leurs personnages touchent au cœur, bien plus que les simagrées et grimaces d'un Jim Carey.

Yamashita Tomohisa à la quarantaine bien cachée, a déjà une longue carrière derrière lui, de beaux gosses en tant que premiers rôles. Ce qui ne l'empêche de jouer dans ce drama qui n'a rien d'un blockbuster. Il oblige tout de même, un jeu d'acteur capable de passer du séducteur-prédateur, à celui qui a tout perdu et suscite la sympathie, voir l'empathie. Et il y arrive parfaitement. À part, peut-être, ces moments "jogging" où la production essaye de l'enlaidir. Mais rien à faire quand on est bô, on est bô.

Fukuhara Haruka qui va certainement exploser en popularité avec son rôle principal dans le nouveau Asadora de la NHK: le bien nommé Maiagare ! est ici, déjà parfaite dans son personnage de candide idéaliste. Sorte de conscience pour l'horrible menteur qu'est le héros, elle sublime ce drama, par sa présence. Tellement naturelle et fraiche, elle apporte cette touche d'humanité et de candeur dans un milieu de requin, que dis-je dans ce monde réel pourri jusqu'à l'os.

Les autres acteurs sont bien sûr à la hauteur, notamment le sombre Ichihara Hayato ou les personnages féminins pas si secondaires que ça, qui qui apportent tous leurs lots de mystère. Il y aura, très franchement, quelques rebondissements intéressants, jusqu'à la dernière minute, si bien qu'on en demandera davantage.

L'attachement aux personnages, l'ambiance feel good et l'envie de devenir agent immobilier est bien là. La NHK a encore réussi son pari. Et j'attends avec impatience d'autres catégories socio-professionnelles dépeintes de la même manière, en évitant une fois de plus s'il vous plait une énième adaptation de Toritsu Mizusho. Et cela en toute franchise.

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  • Score: 7.6 (scored by 566 users)
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