Sakurako Kuj
She is a sharp-witted beautiful woman who comes from a prominent family and lives in a big old house with only a housekeeper as a companion. She has a hobby of collecting the bones of dead animals and reconstructing them. However, she is more interested in human remains. And with her being an osteologist, she also developed forensic skills from her uncle, a prominent forensic scientist in the prefecture, and has helped with many unsolved murders. She has a dislike for interpersonal relationships, although she has a fiance working with the Hokkaido Prefectural Police.
Shatar Tatewaki
He is a high school boy who assists Sakurako in her bone-digging expeditions. It so happens that they always find human remains in the process. He keeps Sakurako in check, as she tends to go crazy and try to keep the human remains for herself.
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Each bit of this story fits together like a skeleton (pun intended) and the thrills and suspense within each episode fit together piece by piece to create a magnificent story filled with genuine, raw human emotion and honesty that is something very fitting with reality.
The actors and actresses that portray each person have a wonderful talent and respect for their skill and their work that is almost tangible and feels as if they've been swallowed by the character they are acting as, while the viewer(s) watch the story unfold. Each episode is very unique and completely different to any stories I've seen or read before, this show and its story are very intriguing!
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It's a pity, because while I haven't watched the anime myself, I became curious about how this live action version fared as an adaptation as compared to the anime and I love what they changed. Instead of a high school sidekick, they made Shotaro a college grad, they took out Sakurako's fiancee, etc. Shotaro's internal monologue was quite funny as well. But ultimately, these changes aren't taken to their logical conclusions, instead hovering in some sort of nebulous space where Shotaro keeps insisting that he's twentysomething but the show keeps treating him like a child, and where it rather seems as if most problems can be solved by a good speech or two. It's worth watching the first half, at least, but its definitely not a show that gets better as it goes on.
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