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12.31.2013

Dramayear in a nutshell

HELLOUUUU!!
One year has passed again and it is time to wrap it up. In order to make things funnier to ourselves, we decided to film it! (watching this 4:32 minute video takes just as much time as reading it in full post!) So watch it! (Blogger is playing a bitch to me, so you must go to Youtube to watch it .. click on the next text:)

CYPSIS BLOG DRAMA YEAR 2013!!!!


Watch bloopers HERE!

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!
AND MAY THE NEW YEAR HAVE
PLENTY OF AWESOME DRAMAS! 

we also hope that next year we (and you guys also!) will actually
have a life outside the drama-world
*This post was made my Yanne & Cypsis as a end-of-year-collaboration

12.23.2013

How Cypsis writes her reviews?

Hey, everyone! I know some people were waiting for a post last week, but I got to come home early for the Christmas and time just flew here (to be honest I had the draft even ready, but you'll get that one during the new year!). Also Cypsis was busy with her work and delayed posts, so she said I could take a rest for a week as she herself is busy also. Well I ended up doing preparations for next week's post.

Today's post will not be so much about dramas, but more about Cypsis. As I've been next to her all this time, I've constantly witnessed how she writes her reviews. So I decided to give you a sneak peak into her life:
 

Cypsis looks the same when she finds her notes between her school things
about 2-3 months after writing the review

Cypsis takes notes while watching drama/movie on a random paper and later loses it to unknown places. Usually she makes a new draft to her blog as soon as she has started watching a drama (fills in the basic stuff – country, format, genre, cast, rating) – as you can see she doesn’t fill in the synopsis, because she is too lazy to do it immediately. Or she tells me to fill it in (because she is too lazy to do it herself).

After finishing the drama/movie - when she is on the roll she will start writing the review a day after watching (‘cause she is a late-night watcher – she usually goes to sleep after watching a drama/movie. Or to YouTube to check out fanmade MV’s in case the drama/movie was awesome).
If she isn’t on the roll or the drama/movie wasn’t so awesome, then she will leave the draft alone for some time (sometimes for weeks as you already know).

The most important component that helps Cypsis write her reviews is MUSIC. Heck there isn’t a thing she does without music (trust me - I lived with her for 19 years).
Don't we all just love that site?
During the writing process she keeps checking sites like Dramawiki.com. Also some language sites because her mother tongue is a language with only ~1 million of speaking population, so obviously she needs language advise from time to time. While writing she also googles for other blogger’s reviews or for fans opinions – she’s curious what others thought about drama/movie.

Cypsis starts the review with introduction – usually immediately stating what her prejudices were and whether she liked it or not. Then she goes on to the main characters – the part that you probably can read from most of the drama-bloggers blogs but never the way Cypsis expresses herself.
By this point she has done quite a few stops in different sites and forgotten that she was writing a review.

She continues with most important side characters or characters worth mentioning – to me this is probably the most interesting part of Cypsis’s reviews because she quite often writes about characters no one else bothers to blog about. Well maybe I’m just biased (as I’m a volunteer-slave labour to her)
She also adds some extra lines about stuff related to the drama/movie (usually random things she liked or disliked or random facts she has dug out from the net or heard from me - 
all those snakcs around Hotaru -
Cypsis is the same whenever she has the chance
‘cause my brain can memorise pointless things about Japanese movie industry – which she somehow finds important to add to her review.)

By this point there has been at least 4 snack breaks – yeah the person at the header is Cypsis and she has the perfect figure, but that doesn’t stop her – if she were one of the seven sins: She’d be Gluttony.

While writing the main review, she sometimes jumps from the main review to the spoiler review. So as you can see the spoiler review is basically written while she is writing the main one. And that is the reason why she in the middle of the review has written “read it from the spoiler review”. Makes you question “Why bother with writing the spoiler review?”, right? Well Cypsis is a person who hates spoilers – no seriously she has dropped reading a book just because she heard a little spoiler.

Is there anyone who didn't feel the urge to take a screenshot of
this utterly cute scene in "Tokyo Bandwagon"?
When everything has been said in the main review, it is only 90% finished. When she switches into her lazy mode, she publishes the 90% finished review. So what’s the missing part? PICTURES! Cypsis likes taking screenshots but only when the scene is really cute one! But random screenshots like a character picture etc – not her style. Eventually she adds the pictures - usually after I've reminded it for like 100s of times.

After the review is published or while Cypsis is having trouble with taking the pictures, the review goes through “the language check” – in other words I re-read the review and make some changes when needed (at times she is too lazy to do the checking herself and she has a habit of writing a sentence and changing the words in the middle so in the end the sentence looks like this: “She did not actions were unbelievable.” ).

If she does that in one row, it takes 2-4 hours. As you can see – it’s not so easy after all for her, but she still keeps writing new and new reviews. If she doesn't feel like it.. well we just have to wait for a month or so :) And then it starts all over again with a new review :D 

Merry Christmas!!!

12.09.2013

I am the next drama heroine

I feel like I almost killed you all with those two tremendously long posts I wrote last time (and the time before that). Sorry for that - when I get too excited about something or overly interested in some topic, I keep on rambling about it (you DO NOT want to hear me giving a "quick overview" of something that I like - it takes hours...).
Anyway this time I decided to revive you with something easier. So I present you some of the points of how my life (I hope I'm not the only one) is not so different from drama heroine. Sure I don't have two drop dead gorgeous men falling for me, nor have I something to avenge, I don't have a job that should be done into a series and I don't have death written over me (I do have an incurable disease but that's nothing to worry about), but that doesn't mean I can't be the next heroine:

- Like Riko from Buzzer Beat I collect stamps/ stickers so that I could get free stuff or a discount.
confession time: During last month I have achieved collecting all the stickers twice.
Now I'm filling my third "book" - do I have a problem?
 - Like Oh Ha Ni from Playful Kiss  I can name all of the members of my favourite bands (+their life stories and history of scandals)
confession time: I do not know all the Super Junior members by heart
as I am not that keen in their music (but I know "sorry sorry" dance!
and lyrics: "sexy, free and single; ready to mingle" -
WAIT! Those aren't the lyrics, right?)

- Like Mary from Mary Stayed Out All Night  even when I have no furniture, as long as I have a device to watch dramas with, I'm alright
confession time: soon it's been 5 years of watching dramas.
For me it's not an choice of preferences, it's a life style.
 -  Like Hotaru from Hotaru no Hikari  when I can stay home for the whole day all alone, I don't give a damn about my looks
confession time: I do wear my hair like that when I'm at my parents place
and my jersey's are the comfiest things on earth!
but the best thing is never leaving your pajamas...
- Like Toake from Party wa Owatta I get sleepy after drinking too much and I can sleep everywhere in every position
NO confession time as I have NOT fallen asleep in the restroom!
(even though I have wanted... and now that I think about it..
maybe that's why it's called the RESTroom?)

So what similarities do you have? Be sure to let me know in the comments! 
Happy continiuning Christmas month!

12.02.2013

The beginning of our beloved jdramas - the black and white 50s

On Sunday night at 23.30 I still had no idea of what to write for the post due to Monday. Thank gyoza I'm a night-person and Inspiration-God hit me hard after eating little bit of magical Nutella. So today I will become a history teacher and tell you a little bit of the beginning of our beloved dramas (written at the time when I should have studied for my Japanese language test) :

 
Inabata Katsutaro - classmates with Auguste Lumiere,
he brought cinematographe to Japan
making it possible to make and show movies in Japan

1897 - first movie that is produced in Japan for cinema.
Just to remind you the official date of "the birth of cinema/ movies" is 28.th of December 1895 (in Paris by Auguste and Louis LumiƩre). So as you can see Japan picked up movie industry in its early days. Of course back then "movie" meant one moving picture that lasted some seconds and had no important characters or actual plot. In Japanese case the first movie showed sights in Tokyo.

13.th of May 1939 - NHK (Nippon Housou Kyoukai, Japanese Broadcasting Corporation, established in 1926) began its experiments in television. Before it NHK was a radio station. Television itself was invented in 1925/26 (in London by John Logie Baird). The world's oldest TV station is WRGB, founded on 13.th of January 1928 in New York. This time Japan had a slight delay as it took 11 years before experimenting in television.

1940 - the first television drama "Yuugemae" ("Before dinner")
Written by Ima Uhei, directed by Sakamoto Tomokazu & Kawaguchi Ryuuji,
Cast: Seki Shihoko, Nonomura Kiyoshi, Hara Izumiko
The story itself was about a family of three: mother, daughter and son. While the daughter Kimiko prepares dinner, the son, Atsushi, reads about a bus crash and starts to worry about their mothers safety. Eventually mother returns with a picture of a man. Children think that mother wants to remarry and the person in the picture is the possible groom. In the end it turns out that its the memorial picture of their father, presumed dead in the war in China.
Guess how long was the first jdrama? A whole 12 minutes. Even though it cannot be tagged as "series" the way jdramas now mean "Japanese series" without those 12 minutes there wouldn't have been the development of 11 episodes we're watching now.

Check the year again and think about the political and social situation. Japan was in the war with China and was preparing for World War II. The following years of occupation did not make it any easier. That's why the idea of television dramas was suspended for about 10 years. 

1952 - "Shinkon album" ("Newly wed album")
While the first drama was quite Japanese-like family drama, then "Shinkon album" was light comedy.
Fun fact it is that there were only 866 television sets that could retrieve NHK at that time, so obviously not many people saw it.

1953 - "Yamaji no fue" ("Flute on the mountain path")
Written by Sugi Kayoko, directed by Hatanaka Tsuneo
Cast: Shitamoto Tsutomu, Otsuka Michiko
It was based on a northern Japanese folktale about a sad love story between musician Tojiro and his wife/ guardian angel.
It was broadcasted live and we all know those awesome "mistakes of live broadcasts". The first blooper in Japanese television industry happened exactly in "Yamaji no fue". The cameraman forgot to turn the camera away from Otsuka Michiko changing her costume. Thank gyoza TV sets weren't that common at that time!

1950s - "Hanshichi"
Written by Nishikawa Kiyoyuki, directed by Nagayama Hiroshi
Adapted from old samurai detective story by former kabuki playwright Okamoto Kido.
This was Japanese first true period drama.
The lenght of the it was 40-minutes - basically the same as one episode nowadays!
Also as in the following years sequels were made - it can be titled as the first Japanese series.

1953 - "Wagaya no Nichiyou nikki" ("Sunday diary of my home")
Written by Yamashita Yoshikazu, directed by Ogata Tsutomu
Cast: Mayumida Kazuo, Horikoshi Setsuko
Murase Sachiko played in "Koufuku e no kifuku"
An upgrade on the series field. In total there were 25 episodes (~30minutes per episode).
It was also the first jdrama in the genre "home drama" or "kitchen-sink drama" as it focused on general differences and the contradictions of being a loving family in a confined space.
Shown on NTV (Nihon TV).

1953 - "Koufuku e no kifuku" ("Ups and downs towards happiness")
Written by Kyo Izumi
The story is about wealthy Kanou family who are rendered penniless after the World War II and are forced to struggle for existence. This drama brought depth and real life events into dramas.
This was the first time that 13 episode format was deliberately used. Even though after that they continued experimenting.

1955 - "Todoroki sensei" live-action
The first televisual adaption of manga! The manga its based on is "Todoroki sensei" by Akiypshi Hajime. Todoroki-san was played by comedian Furukawa Roppo.

The same year KRT (now known as  Tokyo Broadcasting Systems aka TBS) made its first broadcasts. KRT/TBS immediately specialized in "television novels" aka jdramas - guess they knew where the fortune lies! Their first hit was "Himanashi Tobidasu" ("Mr. Himanashi jumps out") - a mystery series about crime-solving adventures of a photographer Himana Shinsuke and his assistant Daisuke.
Gekko Kamen character chart

During those years television series were mainly imported from USA (let me remind you again that Japan was under occupation until 1952, so Japanese after-war life was greatly influenced by American lifestyle). Using this influence as inspiration Japan made its first superhero (and series about him),"Gekko Kamen" ("The Moonlight Mask"), that was one of the few fully Japanese made series that made it into the top ten ratings.

"Jiken Kisha" ("Crime journalist") is considered to be the first "career drama" or "work-place drama" - genre that now is the dominating one in the world Japanese dramas. Actually before that "Himanashi Tobidasu" and "Dial 110" (a slice of life drama about police officers) were made, but as they focused only on the crime solving, "Jiken Kisha" was the first to put emphasis also on the workplace itself.

1959 - two more networks started broadcasting. Guess what they were? Of course they were Fuji TV and Nihon Educational Television, now known as Tv Asahi. Of course as the Royal wedding of Crown Prince Akihito to Shota Michiko  (current emperor and empress) was shown in TV, so it made even more people purchase television sets. Some months later color TVs made it to Japan.
Watashi wa kai ni naritai (1959)
in 2008 it got a remake!

So as you can see the first decade of Jdramas were rather experimental both in the area of television technologies, series formats and plots. Yet the roots of current jdoramas are clearly noticeable in the earlier dramas: the family-focused home-dramas, the touch of reality,  the live actions and even career dramas began during that time! Also I must add that the royal wedding gave inspiration to Cinderella stories as Empress Michiko was a commoner.
From that time come titles as "Tenraku no shishuu" ("Poems from heaven"), "Watashi wa yakusoku wo mamotta" ("I kept my promise"), "Inu wa ikiteiru" ("The dog is alive"), "Tsuiseki" ("Pursuit"), "Watashi wa kai ni naritai" ("I want to become a shellfish"), "My wife is 18", "Mama is my rival", "Minami's sweetheart", "Steel angel Kurumi - Pure", "Bus Dori Ura" ("Off the bus route") , "Non-chan's dream", "Musume to watashi" ("My daughter and I") etc. I hope one day I am able too see some of them.

This time it was rather educative, wasn't it? Most of the information comes from a book titled "The Dorama Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese TV Drama Since 1953" (Stone Bridge Pres, 2003) written by Jonathan Clements and Motoko Tamamuro. Dear Santa, I don't mind having my own copy of this fantastic book! I promise I will study hard to do something as awesome as that with my degree in the future!