Unexpected breaks into song and dance that mock the very genres they belong to. Why You Should Watch (or Skip) It
She was seventeen, wearing a oversized blazer with the sleeves rolled up and a symphony of rubber bracelets climbing her left arm. She sat on the shag carpet of her bedroom floor, index finger hovering over the red "Record" button of her boombox. She was waiting for it. That specific frequency. The signal that only she seemed to be hunting for. The Excitement of the Do Re Mi Fa Girl -1985 - ...
(Juzo Itami): A psychology professor obsessed with developing a "theory of shame". Unexpected breaks into song and dance that mock
The Do Re Mi Fa Girl's impact went beyond Korea and Japan, as the song gained popularity in other parts of Asia, including China, Taiwan, and Southeast Asia. The song's universal appeal lay in its ability to transcend language barriers, with listeners from different cultures and backgrounds singing along to the familiar melody. The song's music video, which featured Choi Yu-ri performing the song with a group of dancers, was widely played on MTV and other music channels, further increasing the song's global reach. She was waiting for it
We meet the protagonist (The Girl, 17) working in a dysfunctional kissaten (coffee shop). She has perfect pitch but crippling stage fright. Her only companion is a cracked Walkman playing a loop of Chopin. The world is a cacophony of pachinko parlors and salaryman groans. That is until a rogue DJ (played by a cameo of a then-unknown Beat Takeshi) gives her a mixtape labeled "Do Re Mi Fa."
"The Excitement of the Do Re Mi Fa Girl" Do-Re-Mi-Fa Musume no Chi wa Sawa-gu ) refers to the 1985 cult classic film directed by Kiyoshi Kurosawa