Après avoir passé six ans en prison pour un crime, Crystal est libérée et découvre que son ex-petit ami est avec la fille du gouverneur. Pour retrouver sa vie, Crystal commence à sortir avec... Tout lireAprès avoir passé six ans en prison pour un crime, Crystal est libérée et découvre que son ex-petit ami est avec la fille du gouverneur. Pour retrouver sa vie, Crystal commence à sortir avec le gouverneur.Après avoir passé six ans en prison pour un crime, Crystal est libérée et découvre que son ex-petit ami est avec la fille du gouverneur. Pour retrouver sa vie, Crystal commence à sortir avec le gouverneur.
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Wow. Great show. Solid narrative. Superb pace. Smashing suspense. Really excellently-written with fabulous character-development.
Characters are very interesting and dynmaic and the chemistry works super-well. From incredibly awkward paid people placed in big stake operations to the big evil boss to crazy personalities in Tokyo's underbelly. Top stuff.
I really loved this show. I'm 5/7th of my way through and I watch a lot of Japanese cinema and I'm now curious to see what other shows Hitoshi Ône will make. He has talant. This is definitely what Netflix needs more of.
Original and gripping drama with fabulous characters. Please do more of this Netflix.
Characters are very interesting and dynmaic and the chemistry works super-well. From incredibly awkward paid people placed in big stake operations to the big evil boss to crazy personalities in Tokyo's underbelly. Top stuff.
I really loved this show. I'm 5/7th of my way through and I watch a lot of Japanese cinema and I'm now curious to see what other shows Hitoshi Ône will make. He has talant. This is definitely what Netflix needs more of.
Original and gripping drama with fabulous characters. Please do more of this Netflix.
Everything stated so well as a 'con man' or heist series, there the right mix of suspense, wit, character development and fun in the series. You really wonder what happened to the con men that turn them into con men. You start caring for the characters cause they're not paper thin single dimensional characters. Things are going well in the first 5 or 6 episodes.
Then it fell apart really quick in the last 2 episodes. As if they're told they have to wrap it up all of a sudden, the series got really dumb in a hurry. Plot conveniences, irrational thinking, rushed pace... It would have been so much better if they stopped after 6 episodes and leave the rest in season 2. It was still worth the time to watch but it really fell apart towards the end.
Then it fell apart really quick in the last 2 episodes. As if they're told they have to wrap it up all of a sudden, the series got really dumb in a hurry. Plot conveniences, irrational thinking, rushed pace... It would have been so much better if they stopped after 6 episodes and leave the rest in season 2. It was still worth the time to watch but it really fell apart towards the end.
10kooseoul
There's a growing disappointment that Japanese dramas have been declining in quality recently. Japanese TV stations commission dramas from external production companies four times a year, once each quarter. However, due to this long-standing tradition, they're now churning out predictable works that lack originality. The themes, stories, roles, and actors all seem to follow a formulaic pattern, resulting in Japanese TV series that are consumed and discarded without much impact.
In contrast, this Netflix original series is a rare gem with a solid story (based on an already highly acclaimed novel) as its foundation. The performances and unique characteristics of each role are well-portrayed, making it thoroughly engaging. Unlike the typical 10-episode structure of Japanese drama series, this one is compressed into 7 episodes, allowing for a streamlined and fast-paced narrative without unnecessary filler. This is definitely a strong point.
I'd like to praise how well the story, roles, and subject matter come together to create an excellent final product. The portrayal of the aging police detective, just six months away from retirement, is particularly noteworthy. It presents a realistic and convincing image of a seasoned investigator without falling into exaggeration. It's surprising to find charm in a gaunt, tired-looking old man, which makes this performance all the more impressive.
In contrast, this Netflix original series is a rare gem with a solid story (based on an already highly acclaimed novel) as its foundation. The performances and unique characteristics of each role are well-portrayed, making it thoroughly engaging. Unlike the typical 10-episode structure of Japanese drama series, this one is compressed into 7 episodes, allowing for a streamlined and fast-paced narrative without unnecessary filler. This is definitely a strong point.
I'd like to praise how well the story, roles, and subject matter come together to create an excellent final product. The portrayal of the aging police detective, just six months away from retirement, is particularly noteworthy. It presents a realistic and convincing image of a seasoned investigator without falling into exaggeration. It's surprising to find charm in a gaunt, tired-looking old man, which makes this performance all the more impressive.
I thought this series was one of the best Asian drama series I've seen on Netflix since Squid Game. It features some amazing actors. Not a dud among the entire very large cast. One huge problem though: The voice dubbing actors for Harrison the ring leader and the guy who plays the swindleing attorney, aren't consistently convincing and come across as over-striving amateurs. Takumi's voice actor may be reasonably cool, but these 2 bad dub actors render the English dub version virtually unwatchable by the middle point of episode 1. So that being said, I'm reviewing the original Japanese with English subtitles "Tokyo Swindlers" from this point onward. The ever impressive Go Ayano stars as Takumi, a cat loving swindler with PTSD who acts as an inscrutable foil to a psychopath mentor mastermind (who could be the devil himself he's so evil). How this series is not higher rated may have to do with its raw treatment of some very dirty business and a continual flow of of violent repugnant weirdoes with sick execution fetishes. Bottom line is this series is SO not for the squeamish and/or those who watch crime shows to root for one heroic protagonist who miraculously dodges every bullet. Special props to the theme music composer Takkyu Ishino. His claustrophic techno-pop is perfect for biting your nails to while you watch each adrenaline-laced scam unfurl. (And if you get hooked on Ishino's theme music like I did, watch the credits at the end of every episode for 4 full minutes of its trance-inducing vibe.)
I was initially impressed by the production quality, screenplay and writing which dared to pull off twists which stir the emotions and keep you wondering what happens next. That and it was a fresh take on Japanese dramas which didn't have the usual anime-derived dramatisations.
However holes start to appear when it appears certain characters are so omnipresent but yet oblivious where the plot armour resides.
Then the season finale slips on its own banana peel in the last episode. There were so many unrealistic interactions as some characters and sequences suddenly suffer from the usual prolonging, dramatisations and silliness to force the series to end on a certain note and pave the way for a money grabbing 2nd season.
Rest assured it did not get my thumbs up from the choices given after the show ended.
However holes start to appear when it appears certain characters are so omnipresent but yet oblivious where the plot armour resides.
Then the season finale slips on its own banana peel in the last episode. There were so many unrealistic interactions as some characters and sequences suddenly suffer from the usual prolonging, dramatisations and silliness to force the series to end on a certain note and pave the way for a money grabbing 2nd season.
Rest assured it did not get my thumbs up from the choices given after the show ended.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBased on novel "Jimenshitachi" by Ko Shinjo (published December 5, 2019 by Shueisha).
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By what name was Jimenshitachi (2024) officially released in Canada in French?
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