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Trick comprises a comedic Japanese television drama and movie series (three seasons, four movies, and three feature-length TV specials), as well as associated comic books, novelizations and meta-fiction novels about a failed magician and an arrogant physicist who debunks fraudulent spiritualists.
Friends is a 4-episode South Korean-Japanese short drama that aired in 2002. It was produced by TBS (Japan), and MBC (South Korea). This was the first time in drama history that the two countries collaborated to co-produce the show in both South Korea and Japan. It was originally broadcast on February 4–5 in Japan and February 15–16 in ...
This is an incomplete list of Korean dramas, broadcast on nationwide networks KBS (KBS1 and KBS2), MBC, SBS; and cable channels JTBC, tvN, OCN, Channel A, MBN, Mnet and TV Chosun. The list also contains notable miniseries and web series broadcast on Naver TV , TVING , Wavve , Coupang Play , Netflix , Viu , Viki , iQIYI , Disney+ ( Star ), Apple ...
Beautiful Life - starring Takuya Kimura, Takako Tokiwa, and Koyuki; Food Fight - starring Tsuyoshi Kusanagi, Kyoko Fukada, Rie Miyazawa, and Takuya Kimura; The 6th Sayoko (六番目の小夜子) - starring Suzuki Anne, Chiaki Kuriyama, Takayuki Yamada, Ryo Katsuji, and Marika Matsumoto
Television series about the Korean independence movement (2 P) Pages in category "Television series set in Korea under Japanese rule" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total.
Television series which originated in Japan in the decade 2000s. i.e. in the years 2000 to 2009. Television shows that originated in other countries and only later aired in Japan should be removed from this category and its sub-categories
Directed by Cambodian-French director Davy Chou, this critically acclaimed film is centered on a 25-year-old Korean adoptee named Freddie (Park Ji-min), who ends up in Seoul for the first time in ...
As in many other countries, Japanese television is arguably the most important media type. A survey completed in 2000 by NHK, Japan's public broadcasting network, showed that 95% of Japanese people watch television every day. Eighty-six percent said they consider television an indispensable medium, and 68% said the same of newspapers.