Iori Igarashi is a talented radiographer who believes the “truth” is definitely captured in CT and MRI images. He and radiologist An Amakasu work at a hospital’s radiology department where they determine the causes of patients’ illnesses and injuries.
Category: Drama
Drama
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The Winning Try
A disgraced former rugby star returns as a coach to his high school’s struggling team, where he reunites with his ex-girlfriend and helps the determined captain lead the team to redemption.
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You and Everything Else
From teen years to adulthood, two friends linked by warmth and tension grow apart — until one is asked to accompany the other through her final days.
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Ratu Ratu Queens: The Series
Leaving behind their homes in Indonesia, four women with different personalities venture across the ocean to start new lives in Queens, New York.
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Black Eagle
One of the US Air Force’s most modern tactical aircrafts, an F-100 with a new laser guidance system, crashes into the sea near Malta – a region where the Soviet forces are highly present, too. The CIA immediately sends out their best secret agent, Ken Tani, to salvage the system before it falls into enemy hands. To ensure his loyalty, they bring his two young sons to a nearby hotel on the island.
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Twenty-Four Eyes
TV adaptation of the novel “Twenty-Four Eyes”, combining animation with a few live-action scenes.
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Before Spring
Out of the blue, a bourgeois family on the Sea of Japan finds an unconscious woman on the beach and decides to let her board.
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The Silent Lovers
The story of the ill-fated romance between Greta Garbo and John Gilbert.
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The Clown
Taiwanese drama.
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Squeeze
Richard Turner made Squeeze to break the “conspiracy of silence” about homosexuality. A pioneering early portrait of Auckland’s LGBT scene, Squeeze centres on the relationship between a young man (Paul Eady) and the confident executive (Robert Shannon) who romances him, then mentions he has a fiancée. The film was discussed in Parliament after Patricia Bartlett campaigned against the possibility it might get NZ Film Commission funding (it didn’t). Kevin Thomas in The LA Times praised Squeeze’s integrity and the “steadfast compassion with which it views its hero”.