Completed
blue_coerulea
6 people found this review helpful
May 29, 2024
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0

The Delightful Journey of the Kishida Family!

At the center of this drama are the members of the Kishida family, which includes the mother (Hitomi), the father (Kosuke), the grandmother (Yoshiko), the younger brother (Sota) and our protagonist and the daughter, Nanami.
In my opinion, Nanami was initially a very chaotic character. A teen with emotional baggage, yet having a cheerful personality that is very unique to her. Life has not been easy on her and when things go awry constantly, we see our protagonist grow.
However, she doesn't grow alone...because the Kishida family doesn't work like that.
The entire family grows together. Sometimes helping each other and sometimes through the support of the supporting characters. They expand their horizons, overcome challenges and you will not be able to stop rooting for them.
As a family, their love for each other was genuinely beautiful. They are each other's best source of support and add the supporting characters to the mix, you get one of the most heartwarming line-up of people, who I believe, we all eventually find. Be it the mother's love for her family or the way the father still watches over them. You will find yourself with moist eyes at the end of mostly all episodes along with a cozy warm feeling seeping into your heart.

The acting of the entire cast was nothing short of perfection. The emotions of the characters come through very clearly and engage you so much that you will find yourself crying, laughing and smiling almost unconsciously, making you heavily emotionally invested in the drama.

A must watch for sure! You may not love it as much as I did, but I don't believe you will regret watching it either.

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Completed
Nishikido
1 people found this review helpful
Jul 19, 2024
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

The Warmth of The Family

Papa, Mama, this is your child, with all our shortcomings and mistakes, thank you for raising us and loving us as much as you can.

The story itself is somewhat unusual. Because one of your children was diagnosed with Down syndrome, because your father suddenly died out of nowhere while you were arguing last night, and because you have a mother who has not been able to walk her whole life.

It's hard, life is so hard. But through these difficulties you can feel the warmth of your family, their love, affection and sincerity.

We will overcome this difficulty with patience and compassion, so that we can survive whatever happens.

Our family is the only treasure we have even though the cruelty of the world haunts us throughout our lives.

So appreciate them, and love them, because they are the only people who know us better inside and out. And be grateful for everything that happens in the world, because everything has value, even the smallest things in the world.

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Completed
Hirothero
1 people found this review helpful
Sep 8, 2024
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

387 viewers

Sometimes I wonder who is behind the limited reach of Japanese dramas outside their own country. Perhaps Japanese TV channels are not interested in exporting their stories, or they fail to reach agreements with streaming platforms. This website hardly ever promotes Japanese dramas, yet you can find news about the marriage of two Korean actors or the imprisonment of a third one, neither of which is intrinsically related to films or series. Sites like Kissasian and its various counterparts don't help, as they often steal the altruistic work of fansubbers without crediting them, who then have to upload their work to overly protected websites like Drama-Otaku (thanks to fatemasubs for subbing this drama). However, I believe many people simply consume a lot of mediocre stories and then complain about Japanese works in general, calling them amateurish or saying 'Japanese dramas are always like that,' neglecting stories like Kazoku Dakara Aishitan Janakute, Aishita no ga Kazoku Datta, which fall into oblivion on MDL. The result is 387 viewers and 70 ratings in one year. It’s an absolute shame considering the quality and deep impact this drama has on the viewer. This impression grows stronger knowing that it is a true story about Nami Kishida and her family, although the series slightly changes the names. Nami, portrayed by Yuumi Kawai, is changed to Nanami, and the Kishida family becomes the Kishimoto family.

The story follows the daily adventures and misadventures of the Kishimoto family, led by Nanami Kishimoto, the older sister who looks after her mother, Hitomi, who is depressed after a life-or-death surgery that leaves her in a wheelchair, her brother Sota, diagnosed with Down’s Syndrome, and their grandmother Yoshiko, who will face age-related problems later in the series. Her father, Kosuke, died of a heart attack a few years ago. Under this pretext, it becomes clear that anyone’s life can change completely. At first, Nanami, driven by the innocence or naivety of a child, tries in the most honest and positive way to return to days that are unlikely to return. By the end of the fourth episode, she achieves her goal and brings new hope to her family, but life moves on and sometimes catches up with us in the worst way. When Nanami realises that there are no end credits for her story and unleashes the pain she’s been holding in for so long, she breaks down completely. The end of childhood gives way to a more realistic narrative, with its ups and downs, smiles and tears, exploring family dynamics, the limits and boundaries of each character, and mental health. The structure may be difficult to follow if you expect a more linear story, but like life itself, we move forward and backward in equal measure. Nanami’s emotional journey involves many returns to the beginning with all her problems.

In the end, all the family members come to accept their situation, gradually move on, and become independent, masters of their own lives. They are happy in their own way, because, as Nanami confesses to the illusion of her deceased father: 'Sota’s fine, Grandma’s fine, Mum’s not fine, and I’m not fine.' The story ends with the hope of forging a new path, perhaps reaching for the stars and beyond. The credits roll, but the life of the Kishimoto family continues, just as the Kishida family does in our reality.

I hope to see Yuumi Kawai more often in new productions because she is possibly one of the most promising actresses today.

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Kazoku Dakara Aishitan Janakute, Aishita no ga Kazoku Datta (2023) poster

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  • Score: 8.5 (scored by 71 users)
  • Ranked: #45311
  • Popularity: #13996
  • Watchers: 414

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