Usually, I have a soft spot for Japanese second-chance BL dramas, but this one did not make the grade.
To be fair: It's not the actors' fault, all of them delivered a great performance. It's also not a technical issue -- everything was up to the usual J-BL standards. The problem lies with the story and with the characterisations.
There is much ado about what happened back in middle school to seperate the two main characters, an event that has Miyata still in its grip even fifteen years later -- and somehow none of the two is able to address it, not hurt Miyata, and neither suave Iwanaga; even though the latter is quite adamant about rekindling their Whatever-It-Was. They both act as if ths was some great and traumatising event -- but when we finally hear the whole backstory in episode 5, it's actually nothing to speak of, at least not for two men in their thirties, who should have the emotional maturity enough to understand the difference between a teenaged crush and adult love. And yet, whenever they mention their own age in the present, they talk about it as if they are already middle aged, when they are only just over thirty. Thirty is still young!
... overall, the two main characters behave like a fifteen-year-old would imagine people in their thirties to be like, not like actual adults, which made for a very frustrating viewing experience.
Added to that, we get two love rivals in six short episodes, which are about two too many, and a traditional family in the background -- all of it adds to the impression that this story was written by a teenager who has no idea how the adult world works.
Was it good?
In all technical aspects, it was fine. Characterizations were unsatisfying.
Did I like it?
No.
Would I recommend it?
No, there are better second-chance J-BLs out there.
To be fair: It's not the actors' fault, all of them delivered a great performance. It's also not a technical issue -- everything was up to the usual J-BL standards. The problem lies with the story and with the characterisations.
There is much ado about what happened back in middle school to seperate the two main characters, an event that has Miyata still in its grip even fifteen years later -- and somehow none of the two is able to address it, not hurt Miyata, and neither suave Iwanaga; even though the latter is quite adamant about rekindling their Whatever-It-Was. They both act as if ths was some great and traumatising event -- but when we finally hear the whole backstory in episode 5, it's actually nothing to speak of, at least not for two men in their thirties, who should have the emotional maturity enough to understand the difference between a teenaged crush and adult love. And yet, whenever they mention their own age in the present, they talk about it as if they are already middle aged, when they are only just over thirty. Thirty is still young!
... overall, the two main characters behave like a fifteen-year-old would imagine people in their thirties to be like, not like actual adults, which made for a very frustrating viewing experience.
Added to that, we get two love rivals in six short episodes, which are about two too many, and a traditional family in the background -- all of it adds to the impression that this story was written by a teenager who has no idea how the adult world works.
Was it good?
In all technical aspects, it was fine. Characterizations were unsatisfying.
Did I like it?
No.
Would I recommend it?
No, there are better second-chance J-BLs out there.
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