The Dreams and Humanness of a Bygone Era

平成の空に残っていた、人間らしさ - 『GOOD LUCK!!』

I might be one of those people who can never quite escape the nostalgia of the 1990s and 2000s or, in the late Shōwa and Heisei eras. Maybe it is because of a certain humanness from those times, something we seem to have lost touch with today. Or maybe it is simply because I can still remember and relate to a time when that humanness felt present in everyday life.

That nostalgia often brings me back to the movies, television shows, and music of those eras. Over the weekend, I rewatched another popular Japanese drama from that time: Good Luck!!

I wonder why shows like this still stay with me. But I do not think it is just my own feeling. Back then, there seemed to be a stronger appetite for a spirited life, like life with dreams, even if those dreams looked almost impossible to reach. Good Luck!! captures that well.

The idea that a “sky man” should never give up, endure hardship, and keep trusting his own perspective feels almost symbolic of the way people pursued big dreams then. But the show is not only about ambition or chasing something grand. There is also a strong sense of mission, even in work that does not always receive the spotlight. You see this in characters like Ogawa, the aircraft maintenance engineer, whose quiet sincerity and thoughtfulness give the story another kind of weight.

That is one of the things I miss in shows from that era. People seemed more grounded in one another, in how they felt, how they thought, and how they carried their responsibilities. It was not so much about displaying one’s life or endlessly craving attention and recognition. There was something more sincere, more human, and perhaps more collective in the way people were portrayed.

Is this element forever lost in our society now? I do not think so. And I do not think it should be.

Maybe it is up to us to keep it alive. Nostalgia, then, is not only a longing for the past. It can also be a way of reconnecting with values we do not want to lose.

A side note: Kimu-Taku is, of course, truly handsome. But I have never had any doubt about choosing to watch anything with Shibasaki Kō in it. She is just so good at playing characters full of ambivalence who are strong, wounded, guarded, and sincere all at once.