How does proposal daisakusen end
Meanwhile, Ken is sobbing away in the chapel. He brings her to the preparation room, and tells her expression now is just like the one she showed on her 20th birthday. Removing a button his cuff, he makes a bet with her. If she chooses the hand without the button, she will give up completely on the problem she is troubled about. If she chooses the one with the button, she will go settle her problem.
Rei hesitates at first, but after further urging from Tada, she runs off. It is then revealed that Tada actually has a button in each of his hand. Rei runs around the church, searching for Ken, but is too late when she sees Ken in a taxi, driving off.
Rei gives chase, to no avail. We see her back in the chapel, thinking if things would have been different if she had let her feelings be known to Ken, just like what Ken did himself.
The secret of the ring is also revealed in her flashback. She hears a all-so-familiar voice, and turns to see the yousei not known to her , who is telling her the same things he told Ken when they first met. He asks Rei whether it is still not too late to start changing the present, and upon realizing, Rei opens the door of the chapel, and her door to miracles……. Back in their classroom in their primary school.
Pigging out on caviar. Tada notices Rei is missing. The only woman in Japan to play the horizontal bar in a dress…? The forward upward roll. Eri finds the ring Ken abandoned. A change of plan for Ken. Eri handing over the ring to Rei. Preparing to go back to the present. Wrong time of the present. The yousei commenting on Ken being a changed man. A firm handshake between the men…. Changing the present with his speech…. Having the load off his heart, Ken cries his heart out. Tada proposes a bet to help Rei decide.
Not quite…. Tsuru rudely grabs him, bursting his bubble. Helping filming the ceremony, Ken watches from the side as he narrates in voice-over that since Rei was always near him, he had a large amount of time to express his feelings.
His emotional whirlwind is clearly showing on his face, though no one notice it except the mysterious stalker man, who smiles knowingly. The guests throw flowers to the couple as they leave the church and Eri is the lucky one catching the bouquet.
Everyone gather for the group wedding photography, which forces Ken to witness another sweet moment between Rei and Tada. Look properly — 2. Date properly — 3. Marry within the year! Aw that hurts! Rei comes to Eri, commenting that seeing the three of them running makes her feel nostalgic.
Images of Ken running in his baseball uniform comes to her mind, as she watches him wistfully. Enough with the wise-asses, where are cute kids these days? Ken and Mikio go smoke outside, the latter depressed at the thought of the inevitable weddings to come in the future.
Knowing that, he complains while eating his own burger, though he backflips as soon as he hears Eri stating that she helps making them. By now, poor Tsuru must have turned schizophrenic. Argh, kindergarten times are over, dude! The time comes, and he goes onstage. He begins by saying that Rei and him were together for most of their school years, and he recently opened their elementary school graduation album to read her dream for the future: becoming a cute bride.
He doubts the cute part that again? Bully guys stay bullies as he reveals shameful memories of her, until he focus on how she always thinks of others first, not letting her smile fade even during hard times.
Unable to properly finish his sentence, he turns and bows to the couple, congratulating them and wishing them many years of happiness. His words touched Rei, who wipes a tear while Derby Hat Stalker looks at Ken, as if disappointed by his attitude. Ken gulps when comes the elementary school days, as he remembers when she joined his class and sat next to his seat. A photo of their highschool baseball club appears, revealing a bunch of long faces, and he recalls that day when he stopped halfway again, and first saw Rei cry out of frustration.
He wonders if things would have turned out differently, if he clearly had shown Rei his good side, and surprises himself wishing to return to that time and do it over. A ray of divine light strikes him, accompanied by bells and a Hallelujah chant. In a lightly tone, he offers to give him a time-travel ride through that picture so that Ken rights the wrongs and has no more regrets.
One being the time-limit: so whether this opportunity ends up being effective or a waste is up to Ken. The other is that neither the past nor the present will be affected. Hmm, Rei too? Does he want to go back or not? Of course Ken wants to, but when the fairy whispers something in his ear, he refuses. The fairy insists: he has to perform his request that way! How, you ask? The pose? One more try and Goooooo! The whole team is ecstatic, but Tsuru has to throw a water bucket at Ken for him to stand up.
Tsuru drags him to join the rest of the team, and galvanizes them. Mikio misses his swing and Ken is sent by Coach Itou a complete from his ceramicist self to give him advices. Ken has to go back to the bench, and Mikio soon joins him there after missing another point. Coach Itou calls Ken to be the pinch hitter, making him wince as he remembers how the game turned out. Back to the Future: Tokyo Drift.
SpoilLert: Very spoilerish. Looks more like an oversized leprechaun to me…. But oh — a twist! Does he have what it takes to win his One True Love back? Can he finally pull off… that buzzer beater and win? And in the end, will it all have been in vain? So it was for this reason that I felt apprehensive about his reinvention as YamaPi 2. Although his woodenness as an actor is… legendary, YamaPi is actually… not bad in Proposal Daisakusen. The boy can carry a romantic drama.
Ken goes back into the past thinking that the advantage of hindsight has made him wiser and more percipient, but he still ends up doing and saying the same hurtful things. And as the chronological divide between the photographs and the present becomes ever briefer, the precious window of opportunity gets ever smaller.
Win or lose, I was Team Kenzo to the bitter? As the heroine Rei, Nagasawa Masami is pretty and pleasant and… bland. Oooh, coincidence? Fujiki Naohito as Tada Tetsuya completes the love triangle — but what the eff, man? An F for you, Fujiki! F is for Fail Fail Fail!!! Clause in the University Ethics Manual!!! The unusual spin on the narrative structure of Proposal Daisakusen is promising enough, though rather dicey: all that zipping back through time and ending up at the same wedding reception, where the Leprechaun of Love gives Ken yet another pep talk before zapping him back again into the next photo, is a loop that gets tedious after just a few episodes.
If only the production team had found a way to keep the whole thing fresh. In the Proposal Daisakusen chronological framework, one snapshot or pit stop invariably leads to the next, even when Ken does manage to change a few things with each completed time-slip.
Oh, well. Time-pretzel plots always have that intrinsic mind-screwy quality to them anyway, and the sooner you stop vivisecting your brains thinking of how changing the past alters the future and all that, the better for you. Well, whatev, man. Proposal Daisakusen is better enjoyed if you just take it at face value.
0コメント