The Private Detective Mike (私立探偵 濱マイク, Shiritsu tantei Hama Maiku) is a Japanese television series starring Masatoshi Nagase as the private detective Mike Hama. Each episode of the series was a self-contained story, involving different sets of directors and screenwriters, including Isao Yukisada, Gakuryū Ishii, and Alex Cox. Nagase originally starred as Mike Hama in a trilogy of films directed by Kaizo Hayashi, beginning with The Most Terrible Time in My Life.
The Private Detective Mike | |
---|---|
Genre | Mystery |
Based on | Mike Hama trilogy by Kaizo Hayashi |
Starring | Masatoshi Nagase |
Country of origin | Japan |
Original language | Japanese |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Production | |
Running time | 54 minutes |
Production company | Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation |
Original release | |
Network | Nippon Television |
Release | July 1 September 16, 2002 | –
Synopsis
editMike Hama runs a detective agency from an office on the roof of Nichigeki movie theater. Perpetually short on cash, he takes on all sorts of jobs — missing family members, unfaithful spouses, lost pets — and always gets into trouble.
Production
editThe Private Detective Mike was Nagase's first television role in a decade. The year before, Nagase had starred in a series of popular commercials for Boss Coffee, directed by Ryosuke Maeda, who would go on to direct the second episode of The Private Detective Mike. Suguru Takeuchi, director of episode ten, was also a commercial and music video director. The remaining directors had experience in feature films as directors, screenwriters or assistant directors.[1] Kaizo Hayashi was not involved in the production of the series because he was overseas at the time.[2]
The series was shot on 16mm film. According to Nagase, the decision was due in part to the fact the character of Mike Hama had originated on film. In addition, the television dramas that Nagase and much of the cast and crew had watched as children, such as Detective Story, had been shot on film, which was then being displaced by video.[2]
The sixth episode, directed by Shinji Aoyama, was the first to be completed. A feature-length version of the episode was screened at the 52nd Berlin International Film Festival under the title Mike Yokohama: A Forest with No Name before the series proper aired on television.[3]
Cast
edit- Masatoshi Nagase as Mike Hama
- Mika Nakashima as Akane Hama
- Miwako Ichikawa as Milk
- Jun Murakami as Joji
- Shunsuke Matsuoka as Tadashi
- Haruka Igawa as Hiru
- Miyuki Matsuda as Sayoko
- Sadao Abe as Makoto
- Wakana Sakai as Mint
- Aki Kawamura as Noriko
- Tatsuya Nakamura as Nobu
- Masashi Yamamoto as Yamamoto
- Kyoko Koizumi as Saki
Guest cast
edit- Miho Kanno as Satsuki (episode 1)
- UA as Naomi (episode 2)
- Yōsuke Kubozuka as Kitamura (episode 5)
- Kyōka Suzuki as Doctor (episode 6)
- Eita Nagayama as Chihiro (episode 8)
- Tadanobu Asano as Yukio (episode 10)
- Shinya Tsukamoto as Amami (episode 11)
- Tomorowo Taguchi as Karasu (episode 11)
Episodes
editThe series aired on Nippon TV every Monday from July 1 to September 16, 2002. The televised version of the series was released on VHS, while the DVD release contained the feature-length director's cuts of each episode. The series' opening sequence directed by fashion photographer Glen Luchford with theme song by Ego-Wrappin' was excluded from feature-length version of the episodes.[4]
On its 20th anniversary, the series was released in its original televised form on Hulu and Amazon Prime in Japan.[5]
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "31→1 Fable" Transliteration: "31→1 no guwa" (Japanese: 31→1の寓話) | Akira Ogata | Kenji Aoki | July 1, 2002 |
2 | "Diva" Transliteration: "Uta hime" (Japanese: 歌姫) | Ryosuke Maeda | Ryosuke Maeda | July 8, 2002 |
3 | "Wherever You Go, Go Far" Transliteration: "Doko made mo tōku e" (Japanese: どこまでも遠くへ) | Kôji Hagiuda | Kishu Izuchi | July 15, 2002 |
4 | "Sakura Sakuhi" Transliteration: "Sakurasakuhi" (Japanese: サクラサクヒ) | Isao Yukisada | Isao Yukisada and Shoichi Mashiko | July 22, 2002 |
5 | "Flower" Transliteration: "Hana" (Japanese: 花) | Hideaki Sunaga | Miyagi Yoshihiko | July 29, 2002 |
6 | "Forest With No Name" Transliteration: "Namae no nai mori" (Japanese: 名前のない森) | Shinji Aoyama | Shinji Aoyama | August 5, 2002 |
7 | "Private Life" Transliteration: "Shiseikatsu" (Japanese: 私生活) | Ryo Iwamatsu | Ryo Iwamatsu | August 12, 2002 |
8 | "Time Goes By, You're Beautiful" Transliteration: "Tokiyo tomare, kimi wa utsukushi" (Japanese: 時よとまれ、君は美しい) | Sogo Ishii | Akio Satsukawa | August 19, 2002 |
9 | "Mister Nippon: 21st Century Man" Transliteration: "Mister Nippon ~ 21 seiki no otoko" (Japanese: ミスター・ニッポン〜21世紀の男) | Tetsuya Nakashima | Tetsuya Nakashima | August 26, 2002 |
10 | "700 Yen a Minute" Transliteration: "1-funkan 700-en" (Japanese: 1分間700円) | Suguru Takeuchi | Naito Yamada | September 2, 2002 |
11 | "Woman and Man, Man and Woman[a]" Transliteration: "Onna to otoko, otoko to onna" (Japanese: 女と男、男と女) | Alex Cox | Alex Cox | September 9, 2002 |
12 | "Bitters End" Transliteration: "Bitāzuendo" (Japanese: ビターズエンド) | Gō Rijū | Gō Rijū | September 16, 2002 |
Notes
edit- ^ also known as Mike Hama Must Die!
References
edit- ^ "Please, Hama, don't hurt 'em". The Japan Times. 2002-06-30. Archived from the original on 2003-03-07. Retrieved 2022-07-16.
- ^ a b "永瀬正敏主演!20年前の伝説の探偵ドラマ「私立探偵 濱マイク」が遂に配信スタート!". PR Times. 2022-07-01.
- ^ "A Forest With No Name". Midnight Eye. 2002-11-07. Retrieved 2022-07-16.
- ^ "永瀬正敏主演ドラマ「私立探偵濱マイク」配信スタートに「マイクを生き続けさせてくれて有難う」". Nikkan Sports. 2022-07-02.
- ^ "伝説的名作ドラマ『私立探偵 濱マイク』放送20年の節目で配信開始 永瀬正敏が語る制作秘話". Yahoo! News. 2022-07-01.
External links
edit- The Private Detective Mike at IMDb
- Official website (in Japanese)
- Fan website (in Japanese)
- Mike Hama Must Die! Q&A with episode director Alex Cox