Forget WWE. Japan’s Joshi Puroresu (e.g., Stardom, Tokyo Joshi Pro) is a distinct art form. Matches are built not on trash-talk, but on "fighting spirit" (konjo). The narratives are melodramatic, the moves are stiff, and the fanbase is fanatically loyal. It sits halfway between sport and kabuki theater.
Unlike the children's puppet shows of the West, Bunraku features half-life-sized puppets operated by three visible puppeteers. The tragic love stories and revenge tales written by Chikamatsu Monzaemon are so complex that they directly influenced the narrative structures of modern jidaigeki (period dramas) and manga like Lone Wolf and Cub. risa omomo forbidden love xxx jav hd uncensore fixed
All Japanese entertainment is graded on how it handles this binary. A drama for domestic audiences (uchi) uses high-context dialogue (leaving sentences unfinished, assuming shared knowledge). Anime for export (soto) often over-explains powers ("My Bankai is stronger than your Getsuga Tensho!"). This explains why Japanese film remakes often fail in Hollywood; the subtext cannot be translated. Forget WWE