
Daisuke, who runs a local livestock business, spent his ordinary days working until his childhood fr...
I like that they put the 2 sides of the incidents, because yes, even perpetrators/criminals/people in the wrong have feelings. He also didn't have much option in the countryside as a gay teenager. (Doesn't make it okay, of course)
Having Daisuke's feelings and point of view, then Masa was good...but they didn't adress the trauma at all, and stayed in the surface...I would have like more psycological elements.