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Koi wo Suru nara Nidome ga Joto japanese drama review
Ongoing 6/6
Koi wo Suru nara Nidome ga Joto
9 people found this review helpful
by ariel alba
Mar 5, 2024
6 of 6 episodes seen
Ongoing 2
Overall 10
Story 10.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 10.0
Rewatch Value 10.0

'When it comes to love, the second time is better'

Everything starts (or should I say "continues"?) thanks to chance. Miyata Akihiro (Hasegawa Makoto) and Iwanaga Takashi (Furuya Robin) meet again when the former, a business magazine editor who has just begun the tenth year of his career, must start a new column and hires a popular university professor from the Faculty of Economics, who turns out to be his first love of youth.
Takashi has changed his name from Hoshizawa to Iwanaga after being adopted by another family after finishing high school and the two having separated. This is the reason why Akihiro Miyata does not relate the boy he loved in the past with the person he is trying to locate to propose to be in charge of the new section in Tokyo Business magazine.
They immediately recognize each other. A decade has passed since they were dating and today they are around thirty years old and life has taken them on different paths and treated them in different ways. They look at each other, talk nonsense to avoid remembering the past, while they decide what topics will appear in the publication.
This is how 'Koi o Suru Nara Nidome ga Joto' begins, the live-action dramatic adaptation of the popular manga by Keiko Kinoshita that was serialized in "Chara Selection" (Tokuma Shoten) from 2018 to 2022.
Directed by Yuka Yasukawa, known for the drama 'Jack Frost' (MBS) and the film 'Yodaka no Unrequited Love', the series will tell us that that love story was not overcome by time and boredom, and the new meeting, Initially professional, it will begin a love relationship that is both old and new.
Skilled as usual when it comes to entertaining and awakening the audience's empathy, the director invites us to a series that lives up to the plot intensity proposed in the script by the talented Aya Watane, who worked on 'Yokai Share House' and 'One Room Angel', this time with Yasukawa himself.
Rich in hidden feelings, in hidden frustrations that will be revealed through the conversations of the protagonists and the evocation of times gone by, as well as current conflicts, such as editorial work, teaching work and university scientific research, the crisis of couple and the desolation behind a breakup, 'Koi o Suru Nara Nidome ga Joto' is told with great detail and care, and the music adds an overall air of reflection and empathy.
With a well-cared for story, full of hidden twists that are revealed to the extent that the paths of the two protagonists cross again, we will immerse ourselves in this journey of searching for happiness, reconciliation and, why not, forgiveness. .
The sound design, original music, editing and photography round out the script's discourse, making use of very interesting shots and high-flying staging solutions.
Regarding the drama adaptation, Keiko Kinoshita expressed: "As a viewer, I was able to see the monochromatic story of the manga colored by the hands of many people, including the cast and staff, and told in a different way in the form of images."
In his desire to achieve a "total split", in which each character he plays is unique and different from the others, has led Hasegawa Makoto to face a wide range of characters and challenges throughout his career. In this, his first leading role, he plays a serious boy who is very enthusiastic about his job as an editor, but when he reunites with his former love, his life falls apart due to his own dark history/trauma.
Likewise, in a constant search for diversity and authenticity in his acting work, Rotoshi Furuya, in his debut in a leading role, plays a university professor with a judicious and calm personality, who shows simple expressions of love when he reunites with Miyata, who has a personality completely opposite to him.
The relationship that the two will experience is very endearing and provoked a variety of moving emotions in me.
'Koi o Suru Nara Nidome ga Joto' shows two talented young actors, for the first time as co-stars, recreating an atmosphere of love and executing their roles with honesty. As they deepen their bond day by day, the viewer will be able to appreciate the pleasant changes in their expressions.
With lush and beautiful visual expressions, characteristic of Yuka Yasukawa's work, this realistic depiction of an adult love story follows ex-lovers who meet again for the first time in more than ten years, with a touch of reality exclusive to those in their thirties. .
One of the most romantic and exquisite Japanese dramas of the BL genre that, in addition to making you laugh and cry, will make you wonder how we deal with the loves of the past, those that appear by surprise and that, in many cases, we have not yet forgotten, because its protagonists are a couple that rekindles their relationship after more than 10 years.
How many times has Miyata wondered what happened to that person with whom he had a great love story during his adolescence and early youth? How many times did Iwanaga think what would happen if he saw again the person who has been and is his only love? Will they both be aware that first loves are never forgotten?
And Akihiro Miyata and Takashi Iwanaga loved each other very much, big time, and promised to elope in their high school years, but they made fun of it, which led to their eventual breakup. And that is why, throughout the 6 episodes, while they share time at the publishing house or outside, having dinner or enjoying a walk, those moments they spent together will come to light but also what led them to separate.
Initially, Miyata treats Iwanawa coldly, as a business partner, having promised never to fall in love with him again. However, he continues to appreciate her beauty, her talent and that character that he fell in love with when he was practically a teenager. Everything is intact, there, within reach of your eyes and your hands... your entire body, your entire being. And the other yearns for the same.
Because yes, they separated and their lives took a 180 degree turn: Akihiro Miyata, who also actively participates as an actor in The Rampage, is today an adult, serious and responsible man who is incapable of being honest with his first love again. after a decade of breaking up with him. Meanwhile, Takashi Iwanaga lives immersed in his work as a university professor and has a mature and relaxed personality. Both are still single and have problems facing maturity. Is it perhaps that they secretly hoped to meet again at some point in their lives?
But, despite being separated, they know that they are still the perfect couple, it is as if time has stopped for them and they continue enjoying the same songs they listened to on their headphones in high school, watching the same romantic movies lying in the floor of one of the two's rooms or playing a video game on their cell phone, while they kissed secretly from the others. Until something happens that will make the smiles and romance between them end up giving way to a series of reproaches related to what could have been and was not.
However, their characters do not exude bitterness or resentment, and, although they assume that loving each other is sometimes not enough and that "love stories only end well in the movies," they will fight with all their might so that, now, after meeting again and discover that your love has remained unscathed over time, the time has come to express: "When it comes to love, the second time is better" and make your love also like a movie... or rather, a television series .
Little by little, through seductive looks and tender gestures and subtle smiles, the lovers of yesteryear will reconcile with their past, to which they refer with flashbacks and sound evocations.
One of the strong points of 'Koi o Suru Nara Nidome ga Joto' are the dialogues between Akihiro Miyata and Takashi Iwanaga. Through what they say and what they keep quiet or hint at, we learn about their shared history and the personality of each one of them.
Sprinkled with a nostalgia that emerges throughout the series to make us recover that lost youthful feeling and the confusion caused by the arrival of adulthood, this would be the occasion to ask ourselves: What will happen to the boy over 30 years old who no longer Can you be as honest as before when you meet your soulmate again? What will happen to this "second" love, full of tactics and approaches with which it is expected to bear fruit and consolidate?
Note: With permission from the MDL administrators, I will leave the review open to, if appropriate, continue rating the series as the following episodes are broadcast.
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