Prayers In The Emergency Room
Japanese Drama DVD (2020) Complete Box Set English Sub
SKU : 9555499413691
- Disc
-
DVD ×3 pcs
- Region Code
- Region All
- Video
- NTSC: Widescreen 16:9
- Audio
- Japanese
- Subtitle
- Chinese, English
$ 31.99
Add to- Title
- Prayers In The Emergency Room
- aka
- Byoshitsu de Nembutsu o Tonaenaide Kudasai
- Japanese Title
- 病室で念仏を唱えないでください
- Genre
- Medical
- Date airing / In cinema
- 2020
- Listing Date
- 2022-05-31
- Production Country / Region
- Japan
- Studio
- Japan TBS
Starring:
Ito Hideaki, Muro Tsuyoshi, Matsumoto Honoka, Katayose Ryota, Tsuchimura Kaho
Ito Hideaki, Muro Tsuyoshi, Matsumoto Honoka, Katayose Ryota, Tsuchimura Kaho
Synopsis:
Matsumoto Shouen entered monkhood because he could not rescue his childhood friend who was drowning right in front of him when he was a kid. Wanting to save the lives of the people important to him in their last moments, he also aspired to be a doctor. At the hospital, Shouen engages in medical care as an emergency doctor and also chants sutra for the deceased at the morgue or provides psychological care for terminally ill patients as a Buddhist monk. As a result, there are times when he treats patients brought into the emergency centre while he is in his robes and causes them to jump to the conclusion that they have died. Although he is disliked not only by patients but also colleagues for chanting prayers to Buddha and preaching for everything, he is cheerful and sincere. As Shouen grapples with how he should save lives, attend to deaths and support the families of patients, he grows as a doctor, a monk and a person.
Matsumoto Shouen entered monkhood because he could not rescue his childhood friend who was drowning right in front of him when he was a kid. Wanting to save the lives of the people important to him in their last moments, he also aspired to be a doctor. At the hospital, Shouen engages in medical care as an emergency doctor and also chants sutra for the deceased at the morgue or provides psychological care for terminally ill patients as a Buddhist monk. As a result, there are times when he treats patients brought into the emergency centre while he is in his robes and causes them to jump to the conclusion that they have died. Although he is disliked not only by patients but also colleagues for chanting prayers to Buddha and preaching for everything, he is cheerful and sincere. As Shouen grapples with how he should save lives, attend to deaths and support the families of patients, he grows as a doctor, a monk and a person.
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