Azuma Sakutaro is a 38-year-old gay man who is currently unemployed. In the past, he worked as an ace pharmaceutical sales representative, but when his performance began to decline in his mid-thirties, he became increasingly anxious as people around him moved forward with marriage or career changes. Feeling left behind, he eventually reached his mental and physical limits and suddenly resigned. Now he lives at his sister’s house, spending his days sleeping late and going out at night. One evening at a gay bar, Sakutaro is nearly forced into a hotel by a man he just met. At that moment, he is helped by Kuji Shizuka, a former coworker and rival from his pharmaceutical company days. Eight years earlier, the two had competed as top sales representatives at the same company, and on the day Kuji left the company, they spent a single night together. Kuji now works as a medical translator and lives a different life from before. Their unexpected reunion after eight years brings their once-sealed, one-time relationship back to the surface, setting their lives in motion again as they reconnect. (Source: MyDramaList) ~~ Adapted from the manga series "Smoke Blue no Ame Nochi Hare" (スモークブルーの雨のち晴れ) by Hamada Kamome (波真田かもめ). Edit Translation
- English
- Français
- Türkçe
- Español
- Native Title: スモークブルーの雨のち晴れ
- Also Known As: Smoke Blue no Ame Nochi Hare
- Screenwriter: Hiraki Mari
- Director: Takahashi Meigetsu
- Genres: Romance, Life
Where to Watch Life in Smokey Blue
Cast & Credits
- Takeda KouheiAzuma SakutaroMain Role
- Shibuya KentoKuji ShizukaMain Role
- Masu TakeshiKuji Yoshiharu [Shizuka's father]Support Role
- Asaka MayumiAzuma Yoshimi [Sakutaro's mother]Support Role
- Yamamoto RyutoMorimoto Tamaki [Sakutaro's nephew]Support Role
- Sakuma MayuMorimoto Fumiko [Sakutaro's older sister]Support Role
Reviews
A story about loneliness and the struggles of everyday life...
Many viewers won't like this series much, because first it's not a BL, secondly there is no real drama but many heartwarming/heartbreaking moments in this story. It's a slice of life where two people drawn together, fight their past baggage and come together in the end.It depicts the struggles especially in Japan where social pressure and expecations are a real burden. The last episode Azuma describes that best: "I feel like I've just been running in circles. I kept telling myself I'd take a real break when things settle down. But "settling down"... if you don't force yourself to take the time, it feels like it'll never happen."
We see the disconnect of families like Kuji and his brother, who takes the house Kuji is living in, not just because he inherited but despite his hate for his father. He does not really need that house but he kicks Kuji out of it regardless. Azumas mom is struggeling with loneliness because many eldery people left alone because their spouses already left and their children are struggeling themselves not investing the time to be there for them.
This is slow pacing, some may say boring, but life itself is not an action movie. It's running in circles and to break out of that circle is the real challenge both of them faces. And in the end, they manage to do it.
These are veteran actors not needing a queer role to stay relevant. Of course Takeda Kouhei is best known to us for his role in "Oldfashion Cupcake" while for Shibuya Kento it's his first stop at such an series as a main role (he was a guest in Ossans Love). Both did an amazing job and overall the cast was strong. Production quality and cinematography was on point with slow movements and great pictures to punctuate the actors characters and performance.
If you are tired of the 100th school BL this is something completely different, a mature look of two people struggeling and a sensitive composition of how two people can find to each other without the usual drama and silly scripts. I can't do no other as highly recommand you to watch this. But this is not for escapists, this is for people who want to improve their understanding.
10/10 no notes
I don't know if this is the sort of story that can only truly be appreciated by people at a certain point in their lives, but it hit all the right notes for me week after week. The acting is superb, the unfolding storylines are relatable, and everything feels warm and realistic.Loving in the wake of loss and burnout might look less romantic on the surface, but it is slower and more intentional... and feels grounded even in moments of desperate intensity. The small adjustments that you make to accommodate an important person in your life, and needing to balance that against other commitments or considerations (without resentment) is exactly the kind of mature love being portrayed. A love that is quieter and perhaps less possessive, but no less deep.
Watching this series has felt like a hug that I didn't even know that I needed.





















