Now you can watch it on Amazon Prime.
The following is a spoiler.
It was fun. It was as enjoyable as "Lady Joker."
I told my wife about it, and she watched it in one sitting last night.
-----
I have written before about how "Mark's Mountain" is challenging, and after watching the drama, I now understand why.
There are many characters. This is it.
When more people appear than my brain can handle, I will give up soon.
The "Three Kingdoms" is so bad that it has more than 500 characters.
Without the drama "The Three Kingdoms," I would have never understood the Three Kingdoms for the rest of my life.
-----
It would be helpful if novels could also display a character relationship chart in a directory (tree) structure, not to say a diagram...
If it's "Mark's Mountain."
It would help a lot if you could include the categories "prosecutors," "police," "legal professionals," "universities," and "civilians" under the "good guys," "bad guys," and "bad guys but good guys" trees.
Well, from the point of view of the reading public, this may not be very interesting, but systems engineers are object-oriented, object-thinking, and object-preferring.
Also, please write "University of Tokyo" instead of "Gyosei University.
When I told my wife, she said
"It's obvious to anyone who reads or watches."
But if it is "obvious to everyone," it would be more helpful to me, with my limited brain capacity, if it were described by "the obvious one."
------
As noted here, Yuji Shibamura states that "Mitsubishi" and "Hitachi" are the only two companies in Japan that are developing robotic weapons (as a fiction).
The development of the "i-illuminator" was taken over by "Toshiba"(?). I would have liked Hitachi to be in charge of developing the "i-illuminator.
I would like to point out that neither Mitsubishi, Hitachi nor Toshiba is engaged in such weapons development, like
"It's obvious to anyone who reads or watches."
Yeah, it's technically impossible. It's too complicated.
But I do wonder if there might be some who don't think so.
-----
Today concludes that if you want to enjoy "Mark's Mountain," you can now watch it on Amazon Prime.