But our hero, Ken Iwase (Yamapi), isn’t the groom. He’s the guy standing in the back, delivering a painfully awkward best man’s speech. He fumbles through a list of Rei’s “flaws” (she has a temper, she’s clumsy, she cries easily) trying to pass them off as charm points. The room goes cold. You can feel the secondhand embarrassment through the screen.
Wait. Rewind. Yes. Even back then, she liked him. But Ken’s teenage ego and fear of being teased prevented him from being kind. The Payoff (And The Pain) Ken goes back, fights his awkwardness, and manages to give Rei his own eraser instead. He changes the past! The photo in the slideshow changes to a smiling Rei holding the eraser. proposal daisakusen ep 1
This is the core tragedy of Episode 1: He spent eleven years hiding behind jokes, sarcasm, and the excuse of "being a friend." Now, he watches her marry another man. The Fairy Godfather (With a Bad Attitude) Just as Ken is drowning in "what ifs," a mysterious, glittering fairy godfather—played brilliantly by Hiroshi (the hotel bell captain)—appears. He isn't gentle. He’s sarcastic, grumpy, and calls Ken a coward. But he offers a miracle: the power to go back in time to the moments where it all went wrong. But our hero, Ken Iwase (Yamapi), isn’t the groom
Instead, he walks into the reception hall and finds... the same wedding. The groom is still Tada. The bride is still Rei. The room goes cold
I just finished re-watching Episode 1, titled "We Can Get Married, I Guess," and I am already emotionally compromised. If you’ve never seen this show, let me warn you: keep a box of tissues and a punching bag nearby. The episode opens at a sun-drenched, beautiful church wedding. The bride, Rei Yoshida (Masami), looks stunning. The groom, Tetsuya Tada, is a kind, successful department head. It should be perfect.
He returns to the present, chest puffed out with victory. He expects the wedding to be canceled. He expects Rei to run into his arms.
He changed one memory, but not the outcome. Because here’s the gut-punch lesson of Episode 1: Why This Episode Still Works 15+ Years Later Proposal Daisakusen is not a typical time-travel fantasy. There are no laser guns or paradoxes. It’s a simple, painful reminder that love requires action, not just feeling.