Today, Buyajun introduces the suspenseful new drama "Solomon's Perjury" that is being broadcast, and wowow TV station is commemorating the 30th anniversary of its establishment.

Solomon's Perjury is based on Miyuki Miyabe's original novel.
Miyuki Miyabe, who has been debuting for more than 30 years, is known as the queen of contemporary Japanese mystery novels, and has been elected "Japan's Most Popular Female Writer" for 11 consecutive years and won all the reasoning awards in Japan.
Her works are social speculative fiction, and she is good at integrating social criticism and thinking into her works with warm humanistic care as the background.
Solomon's Perjury is one of Miyuki Miyabe's masterpieces, with a total of 1.5 million words and 15 years of thought.
"Solomon's perjury" means that a man of wisdom and power lied, or that a man who holds the truth lied.
The whole story revolves around a case of the tragic death of a teenager, and depicts a group of young boys and girls who persistently seek a truth in the form of court trials with extremely delicate brushstrokes.
This is the third live-action version of the book, the first time is the 2015 film version, starring Ryoko Fujino directly used the name of the heroine in the book as a stage name debut.
The second version is a TV series made in South Korea in 2016, and it also has a relatively good reputation.
This time, the new version starred in Kami-Shiraishi Mengge (Kami-Shiraishi's younger sister), and the background of the story was moved from the 90s to the modern era.
The protagonist, Ryoko Fujino, is an ordinary female high school student who attends a private high school.
One day, Fujino discovers the death of her classmate Takuya Kashiwaki (Yuki Nomura) at school and is buried in the snow. (Yuki Nomura is the son of Nomura Manzai, his first appearance in a film or television drama)
Kashiwagi died after falling from a building, and the police ruled he had committed suicide.
Fujino vaguely feels that Kashiwaki's death is not so simple, because she has witnessed Kashiwaki being bullied by his classmate Shunji Oide (played by Sakato Takita) at school, Oide is a bad boy, and her father is also a school director, so she is particularly domineering.
At this time, an anonymous letter appeared in Fujino's home, and the sender said that Kashiwagi did not commit suicide, but witnessed Kashiwagi's killing, and the murderers were classmates Shunji Oide, Yutaro Hashida, and Mitsuru Iguchi.
Fujino's father (Masanobu Takashima), a police officer from the Metropolitan Police Department, consulted the school with a whistleblower letter, and the school said it also received the whistleblower letter.
The principal (kaoru Kobayashi) insists that it was not done by the students of the school to protect the school's reputation, and that the denunciation letter is just a prank.
At the same time, the letter was received by the TV station, and the reporter played by Jun Hashimoto launched an investigation and produced a program, which aroused social concern after the TV broadcast.
Fujino and Kashiwagi's classmates Shuri Miyake (played by Maika Yamamoto) and Matsuko Asai (played by Takao Tomita) who sent the denunciation letter were also played by her in the movie version six years ago).
Shuri is discriminated against at school for having a face full of acne, and Matsuko is her only good friend.
Shuri was also bullied by Shunji Ohide and others, so it is likely that he lied that he saw Daiide and pushed Kashiwa down the stairs.
Matsuko, worried about the repercussions of the letter she sent, planned to tell the TV station that it was her own letter, but was killed by a car just before she could say so.
Matsuko, who may know the truth, also died suddenly, and suddenly two classmates died in the class, and the more the protagonist Fujino thought about it, the more wrong she became, she no longer believed in adults, and she had to find the truth for herself whether Kashiwaki committed suicide or the truth that he killed.
And despite the school's opposition, she set up a "campus court" to conduct a campus trial, she believes that Kashiwa was killed by him, and must find the murderer.
Another important role is Kazuhiko Kazuhiko Kazuhara (Played by Miyazawa Icefish), a friend he meets in Kashiwagi Junior High School's cram school, and he helps Fujino to investigate together.
The play explores the "declaration of war" of teenagers on the adult world, challenging the sloppy court trial of adults with a serious and rigorous attitude.
Through the simulation of the virtual court scene and interrogation content of the school, the hypocrisy of the real adult court trial process is satirized, so as to expose the various scars of the adult world, and friends who like suspense works can take a look.