Midnight Diner: Tokyo Stories
Título original: Shin'ya shokudô: Tokyo Stories
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
8,4/10
5,3 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Una antología de historias de relaciones humanas conectadas por la única cafetería abierta de madrugada que frecuentan los personajes. El propietario/chef es quien suele facilitar soluciones... Leer todoUna antología de historias de relaciones humanas conectadas por la única cafetería abierta de madrugada que frecuentan los personajes. El propietario/chef es quien suele facilitar soluciones.Una antología de historias de relaciones humanas conectadas por la única cafetería abierta de madrugada que frecuentan los personajes. El propietario/chef es quien suele facilitar soluciones.
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Not much to say, other than that this is a beautiful little show that will make you laugh for all the right reasons.
I actually thought it was some kind of foodie reality show, so I'm happy to have given it a try just in case.
I actually thought it was some kind of foodie reality show, so I'm happy to have given it a try just in case.
I stumbled on this series by accident as a recommendation by Netflix for me to watch it and I don't know why but I had a feeling Midnight Diner will be amazing and it turned out to be a an absolute gem. My only complaint is that wasn't long enough so I am certainly hoping for a 2nd season!
The sound track is perfect, really sets the mood and the dialogue is smooth and even though I had to use subtitles Midnight Diner made me appreciate the little things in life. The conversations you have with a few close friends, your memorable encounters with total strangers who impact your life immensely. This series has all of that.
There is plenty of drama too! But the sort of humorous drama, the type that create great stories to tell in the future.
The sound track is perfect, really sets the mood and the dialogue is smooth and even though I had to use subtitles Midnight Diner made me appreciate the little things in life. The conversations you have with a few close friends, your memorable encounters with total strangers who impact your life immensely. This series has all of that.
There is plenty of drama too! But the sort of humorous drama, the type that create great stories to tell in the future.
The Master who runs the fabulous 12-seat Midnight Diner has a zen-like all-knowing calm - and almost magically can conjure up dozens of different dishes in his tiny kitchen.
Every food serving takes us into wonderful human stories about our foibles, mistakes, regrets and second chances.
As we get to know the diner's regulars, we become regulars too - glorying in the calm oasis this eatery and its people offer us.
The bite-sized stories run less than 30 minutes and it's easy to binge and get through the series all too quickly. We've now devoured all 50 episodes but are still hungry for a new season of these wonderful tales.
Here's hoping Netflix green lights a sixth season - it's the perfect recipe for our disrupted world.
Every food serving takes us into wonderful human stories about our foibles, mistakes, regrets and second chances.
As we get to know the diner's regulars, we become regulars too - glorying in the calm oasis this eatery and its people offer us.
The bite-sized stories run less than 30 minutes and it's easy to binge and get through the series all too quickly. We've now devoured all 50 episodes but are still hungry for a new season of these wonderful tales.
Here's hoping Netflix green lights a sixth season - it's the perfect recipe for our disrupted world.
As someone who doesn't speak or understand any Japanese, has never been to Japan and knows virtually nothing about the culture, this series charmed the hell out of me. It's as beautifully shot as it is scored, and it really does have a feeling of craftsmanship about it. The premise - an anthology of human stories, linked together by a graveyard shift diner hidden away in the midst of Shinjuku that caters to both a cast of regulars and one-off visitors - and the construction of each individual tale is charming without falling too far into twee familiarity, and each story is perfectly realised.
Kaoru Kobayashi towers as the quietly sympathetic Master, who will cook any dish for anyone, so long as they bring him the ingredients... which gives the show its neat device of theming each episode around a particular recipe. Whether as a symbol of or conduit for togetherness, comfort, romantic or familial relationships, or a Proust-like trigger for bittersweet memories that can never be entirely recaptured, food provides a delicately illustrated metaphor throughout the series.
The issues that the Master's customers face are frequently weighty and almost always universal, but the tone is light enough to take it all in stride and, if the characters feel like archetypes, it's because they're meant to be drawn broadly. Part of the show's whole concept is, just like the remembered taste of a childhood delicacy, to evoke a sense of otherworldly nostalgia - to create something unreal in the liminal space of midnight, in the idea of an oasis untouched by the city; the otherness that strips away illusion - and that evokes feelings rather than the realism of minutiae.
Perhaps the show is at its least successful when it dips into magic realism, but at its core this is a collection of great stories, told well and seasoned with enough humour and enough pathos to satisfy any appetite.
Kaoru Kobayashi towers as the quietly sympathetic Master, who will cook any dish for anyone, so long as they bring him the ingredients... which gives the show its neat device of theming each episode around a particular recipe. Whether as a symbol of or conduit for togetherness, comfort, romantic or familial relationships, or a Proust-like trigger for bittersweet memories that can never be entirely recaptured, food provides a delicately illustrated metaphor throughout the series.
The issues that the Master's customers face are frequently weighty and almost always universal, but the tone is light enough to take it all in stride and, if the characters feel like archetypes, it's because they're meant to be drawn broadly. Part of the show's whole concept is, just like the remembered taste of a childhood delicacy, to evoke a sense of otherworldly nostalgia - to create something unreal in the liminal space of midnight, in the idea of an oasis untouched by the city; the otherness that strips away illusion - and that evokes feelings rather than the realism of minutiae.
Perhaps the show is at its least successful when it dips into magic realism, but at its core this is a collection of great stories, told well and seasoned with enough humour and enough pathos to satisfy any appetite.
This show grows on you immediately from the first episode. The stories of the diner's patrons are grounded in such humble reality that it's not difficult to imagine why this was a hit overseas. I quiver in anticipation should this wonderful series be renewed for a second season (do it Netflix! Please!). Watching it is as satisfying as one of Master's dishes. The direction, the cast, the sets leave absolutely nothing to be desired. It easily ranks among my favorite TV series and I still have two episodes to go - but I'm savoring them.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis is the first season of the Midnight Diner franchise that broadcasted on Netflix with the sub-title Tokyo Stories after Netflix failed to acquire the license of the first three seasons of this franchise.
- ConexionesVersion of Shinya shokudô (2009)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitios oficiales
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Quán Ăn Đêm: Những Câu chuyện ở Tokyo
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración
- 24min
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1
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