Sakurada Shinichi travaillait à Tokyo et habitait dans un logement fourni par son entreprise. Lorsque celle-ci fait faillite, il perd donc à la fois son emploi et son toit. Il ne peut alors que se résoudre à rentrer dans sa région natale où un certain Misuji lui propose un travail : diriger le service de call-girls qu'il possède. (Source: Nautiljon) Modifier la traduction
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- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Titre original: フルーツ宅配便
- Aussi connu sous le nom de: Fruits Delivery Service
- Scénariste: Nemoto Nonji
- Réalisateur: Kazuya Shiraishi, Okita Shuichi
- Genres: Affaires, Vie quotidienne, Drame
Distribution et équipes
- Hamada Gaku Rôle principal
- Naka RiisaMotohashi EmiRôle Secondaire
- Maeno TomoyaOda TetsuroRôle Secondaire
- Matsuo SuzukiMisujiRôle Secondaire
- Arakawa YoshiyoshiMasakaneRôle Secondaire
- Hara FukikoMizukoRôle Secondaire
Critiques
The agency is presented as a quirky and mildly dysfunctional little family that works pretty diligently to keep the business going and the girls safe. The characters at the office are reasonably likable and the actors do a decent job with the material they are given. The story of the day-to-day operations of the agency seems to be a reasonably sober and accurate if slightly gritty depiction of this side of the sex industry in Japan. There is a bit of humor that does land throughout the series, and rather more banjo in the soundtrack than one might expect.
The show is fairly sex-positive but the tone of the production is definitely not approving of the call-girl business in general. Nor is there any fan service here: the women and what they do with their clients is presented in a matter-of-fact manner, and while several gorgeous actresses are part of the cast, they are not presented for the male gaze even in scenes with their clients.
The failure of the series is inherent in its set-up: the show is about Sakita coming to terms with his new job. The arc of the series centers on his repeated failures to be a white knight for the woman at his agency. And so while two of the women he works with are almost certainly raped (trigger warnings for episodes 3 and 12), two of them are kidnapped, and one is physically abused at a rival agency the story only focuses on how those incidents affect him. I think we're supposed to be cheering the fact that Sakita genuinely cares for the women he works with but the series itself really does not.
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