

Overall, with the standard Japanese running gags and love octagon found in any drama, I can conclude that this drama neither fills me with disgust nor gives me the want of wanting to watch scenes over and over again. Only because of its overall enjoyable, feel-good family storyĪcting: 3/5 Stars. Especially that last line where sho decides that he needs to talk to Chisato privately. The ending was not anything spectacular but was something that gave me that satisfactory feeling after watching a drama. Look out for the episodes where Okura Sho (Mukai Osamu) sneaks a kiss or two because those definitely got the fan girl in me going. No one really caught my eye but Horikita’s performance in certain episodes did make me cry, but frankly speaking, thats not hard to do. Generally, the acting, as expected of a Japanese drama is a bit below par compared to Korean ones, but as silly as the plot got, the actors in it were certainly suited to their roles. Although there was endless sweating half naked hot men in this drama, I have to say that 11 episodes is not enough for me to say that this is the single best drama I have ever seen in my life! However, I did find myself wanting to watch episodes as soon as it came out with eng subs (Cheers DramaCrazy). With 11 episodes I wasn’t looking to much plot wise and I was right. Ok, so this is the first drama of Horikita Maki that I’ve bothered to watch since Hana Kimi. However, a life with these six guys under one roof will not go smoothly… –Tokyograph Shinzo promises to free Chisato from her debt if she marries him and becomes the mother of his sons. However, her life changed after being rescued by one man named Shinzo, changing her views on the meaning of “family.” Shinzo comes from a rich family tracing back to the Edo period, and he adopted six good-looking sons with the hope of one becoming his successor, but all of them have strange personalities.

She spent her youth trying to escape from the huge debt her father left her, and her battle with the repossessors unfolded every night. One such refugee is a 20-year-old girl named Chisato, who lost her mother at a young age due to sickness. There are youths referred to as “net cafe refugees,” who have neither a job nor a place to live, but who find themselves hopping around internet cafes.
