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Regardless, the whole is too glossy and commercial to be anymore more than an average medical thriller suited to undemanding audiences." [5] A sequel to the film titled The Triumphant Return of General Rouge was released March 7, 2009. The sequel adapted from "General Rouge no Gaisen," which is the third book in the same novel series as "Team ...
Jin (JIN-仁-) is a Japanese television drama series, first broadcast on TBS in 2009 and a second season in 2011. It is based on the Japanese manga series, Jin , written by Motoka Murakami . It was one of the most popular dramas of the year and won many major awards.
A medical team is dispatched to the patients on a helicopter to provide medical care in the field as soon as possible. Four young physicians are assigned to this latest medical system as " fellows ". At the start of their "fellowship", they experience traumatic medical situations, deal with personal ambitions, witness the fragility of life, and ...
Iryū: Team Medical Dragon (Japanese: 医龍-Team Medical Dragon-, Hepburn: Iryū Chīmu Medikaru Doragon) is a Japanese medical manga series created by Akira Nagai and illustrated by Tarō Nogizaka; following Nagai's death in 2004, Nogizaka became the sole author, with medical supervision taken by Mie Yoshinuma.
Unmet: Aru Nōgekai no Nikki (アンメット ーある脳外科医の日記ー, Anmetto: Aru Nōgekai no Nikki, "Unmet: A Brain Surgeon's Journal") is a Japanese manga series written by Yuzuru Kojika and illustrated by Kanto Ōtsuki.
A medical drama is a television movie or film [1] in which events center upon a hospital, clinic, doctor's office, a paramedic, or any other medical topic or environment. Most recent medical dramatic programming goes beyond the events pertaining to the characters' jobs and portray some aspects of their personal lives.
The 1900s by and large saw the rise of the "doctor novel" as a literary subgenre, which itself is a subset of, or otherwise synonymous with, medical fiction. [14] A 2009 book, Doctors in Fiction: Lessons from Literature, discusses medical practitioners ranging from the late 12th century to the early 21st, including small analyzes of their ...
Based on renowned Japanese novelist Toyoko Yamasaki's representative work Shiroi Kyotō, [4] [5] the drama brings viewers deep into the political inner workings of the medical field by taking a satirical look at malpractice and power plays at a university hospital, [6] [7] [8] and contrasting the paths and personalities of two doctors played by ...