Fuji TV's " Getsuku" drama "Tomorrow Will Be a Better Day " (Mondays 9pm) starring Haruka Fukuhara will begin on July 7th. The human drama is set in a seaside child consultation center, and the script is an original by Tani Aohito of "Gekidan Jikan Seisaku". This is Fukuhara's first lead role in a " Getsuku". The first episode will be extended by 30 minutes.
This heartwarming story depicts Natsui Tsubasa (Fukuhara), who is suddenly seconded from his position as a detective in the violent crimes division of the Kanagawa Prefectural Police Department to a child consultation center, where he comes into contact with a variety of children and parents and grows together with them as a new child welfare officer.
Kento Hayashi will play Tsubasa's supervisor, child welfare officer Kurata Sosuke, Shunsuke Shunsuke Kazama will play the leader of the group, child welfare officer Hachimura Taichi, Toshiro Yanagiba will play Minamino Jo, the section chief and nursery school teacher at the temporary shelter, and Erika Ikuta will play child psychologist Makida Himawari.
The first episode is... "I want to become a detective and help a lot of people." Tsubasa Natsui, who had been working as a detective at a local police station and was trying to fulfill his childhood dream, is suddenly ordered to transfer to a seaside child consultation center.
Still unable to sort out his feelings, he arrives at work at Hamase City Child Consultation Center, where he is greeted by energetic children - the polar opposite of the "dark image" of the center - and Minamino Jo (Yanagiba), the section chief and nursery school teacher at the temporary shelter.
Following Minamino's instructions, Tsubasa heads to the counseling department and meets the team leader, child welfare officer Taichi Hachimura (Kazama), child psychologist Himawari Makita (Ikuta), and other staff members. There, child welfare officer Sosuke Kurata (Hayashi) appears with swollen cheeks and tissue stuffed up his nose. Tsubasa is confused when Kurata asks him, "Are you a good person?"
A resident of an apartment building reported hearing a child crying. After persuading the mother, who was reluctant to be allowed in, Tsubasa and Kurata went inside and noticed a bruise on the boy's inner thigh. However, Kurata left the house without saying anything, and Tsubasa said, "Maybe that delayed response is the reason it's too late." Kurata responded, "The job of the child protection agency is not to expose the crimes of parents."
The next day, the consultation center receives an emergency call from the elementary school, reporting suspected abuse. The child in question is the boy with bruises that the center met at the apartment building.