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Tampopo

Original title: Tanpopo
  • 1985
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
25K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,993
162
Tampopo (1985)
Trailer for Tampopo
Play trailer1:55
5 Videos
82 Photos
Dark ComedyParodySatireComedy

A truck driver stops at a small family-run noodle shop and decides to help its fledgling business. The story is intertwined with various vignettes about the relationship of love and food.A truck driver stops at a small family-run noodle shop and decides to help its fledgling business. The story is intertwined with various vignettes about the relationship of love and food.A truck driver stops at a small family-run noodle shop and decides to help its fledgling business. The story is intertwined with various vignettes about the relationship of love and food.

  • Director
    • Jûzô Itami
  • Writer
    • Jûzô Itami
  • Stars
    • Ken Watanabe
    • Tsutomu Yamazaki
    • Nobuko Miyamoto
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    25K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,993
    162
    • Director
      • Jûzô Itami
    • Writer
      • Jûzô Itami
    • Stars
      • Ken Watanabe
      • Tsutomu Yamazaki
      • Nobuko Miyamoto
    • 127User reviews
    • 85Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos5

    Tampopo
    Trailer 1:55
    Tampopo
    Guillermo del Toro and Neil Gaiman Find Hope in Powerful, Eclectic Films
    Clip 8:43
    Guillermo del Toro and Neil Gaiman Find Hope in Powerful, Eclectic Films
    Guillermo del Toro and Neil Gaiman Find Hope in Powerful, Eclectic Films
    Clip 8:43
    Guillermo del Toro and Neil Gaiman Find Hope in Powerful, Eclectic Films
    Tampopo
    Clip 1:26
    Tampopo
    Tampopo
    Clip 1:25
    Tampopo
    Tampopo
    Featurette 2:03
    Tampopo

    Photos82

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    + 76
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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Ken Watanabe
    Ken Watanabe
    • Gun
    Tsutomu Yamazaki
    Tsutomu Yamazaki
    • Gorô
    Nobuko Miyamoto
    Nobuko Miyamoto
    • Tampopo
    Kôji Yakusho
    Kôji Yakusho
    • Gangster in the White Suit
    Rikiya Yasuoka
    Rikiya Yasuoka
    • Pisuken
    Kinzô Sakura
    • Shôhei
    Yoshi Katô
    Yoshi Katô
    • Master of ramen making
    Hideji Ôtaki
    • Rich Old Man
    Fukumi Kuroda
    • Gangster's Mistress
    Setsuko Shinoi
    • Rich old man's mistress
    Yoriko Dôguchi
    Yoriko Dôguchi
    • Girl Oyster-fisher
    Masahiko Tsugawa
    Masahiko Tsugawa
    • Supermarket manager
    Chôei Takahashi
    • Company executives
    Akio Tanaka
    • Company executives
    Yoshihei Saga
    • Company executives
    Toshimune Kato
    • Office junior
    Isao Hashizume
    Isao Hashizume
    • Waiter
    Mario Abe
    • Ramen stand owner
    • Director
      • Jûzô Itami
    • Writer
      • Jûzô Itami
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews127

    7.924.6K
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    Featured reviews

    10niisja

    Something for Everyone

    This movie is not, I repeat, is not intended for the typical movie goer. It is not to be forgotten a day after having been seen. It should be watched repeatedly, gone over with a solid spoon for thorough digesting. Not everyone who sees it will love it at first. But anyone who gives it a willing and open mind will find a deep respect within drawing them further into the movie. Should the simple viewer happen upon this movie, it is necessary to understand that it is not an American movie and only slightly emulates one, therefore it must be expected that certain aspects of the film will escape one at first. There will be certain chapters of the film which appeal more than others, but it is crucial to make an effort to be considerate of the fact that Juzo Itami was not necessarily making Tampopo up to be an international success. What is truly mindblowing is that this movie is nearly twenty years old! I am completely in awe each time I see this movie, and it never fails to make me stop and watch as Goro is instructing Tampopo on why the customer must, MUST, be observed upon entering the shop while Gun complains that the pork slices are too thin. Slap, slap, don't you want to see how the customer reacts? Isn't it strange? How do we relate in this tale? Pick it up, become an addict, never see another movie the same way ever again.
    redwoods

    What a masterpiece this movie is!!

    I can't count the number of times I've watched this wonder, discovered one night when I rented it from the local video store in 1993. I believe that like a great recipe, you need to practice it at least a dozen times to start to get a grip on it. Every time I watch it I take more pleasure as I get older (and hopefully wiser). This film is without a doubt one of the most sensual, generous masterly realized movie of all times. It is to be hold close to Fritz Lang and Kubrik masterpieces, but obviously in a completely different register. It would take me all night to decipher the various reasons why this pure marvel is so good. But this is not required. It is simply a tale about life and death, and the ongoing process of sex and food in between the two. Epicurism was never thought to be a Japanese value, until we Westerners with all our believes and convictions, realized that Japanese culture encompasses much more that our restrained field of philosophy. This ode to life touches all aspects of our arrogant human society in so many FUNNY and touching ways that I could hardly compare it to anything else watched anywhere else. In a way it is an encyclopedia of human traits. Maybe "La Grande Bouffe" would be the closest contender on SOME aspects only. But Tampopo goes much further in my opinion. And above all the marvelous acting makes it SO FUNNY!! Every time I watch it I laugh more... To have managed to put all these traits of human behavior in only one such great movie is truly an ASTONISHING work in terms of scripting, directing and editing. But even the way it is filmed is perfection itself. Above all keep in mind this NOT a serious boring movie at all but a funny piece of cake to watch... A bit crazy too!! Be aware you'll never look at your bowl of noodles the same way after watching this movie!! "Bon appetite!!"
    9DennisLittrell

    The Wild Bunch at the noodle shop. Slurp!

    There are any number of very funny scenes in this lightly plotted and highly episodic romantic comedy from acclaimed Japanese director Juzo Itami. You may recall him as the guy who got in trouble with the Yakuza, the Japanese "mafia," because they didn't like the way he made fun of them in Minbo no onna (1992). You may also know that he committed suicide at the age of 64 in 1997 after being accused of adultery. He is the son of samurai film maker Mansaku Itami. I mention this since one of the things satirized here are samurai films.

    But--and perhaps this is the secret of Itami's success both in Japan and elsewhere--the satire is done with a light, almost loving touch. Even though he also takes dead aim at spaghetti westerns and the Japanese love affair with food, especially their predilection for fast food noodle soup, at no time is there any rancor or ugliness in his treatment.

    If you've seen any Itami film you will be familiar with his star, his widow, Nobuko Miyamoto, she of the very expressive face, who is perhaps best known for her role as the spirited tax collector in Itami's The Taxing Woman (1987) and The Taxing Woman Returns (1988). She has appeared in all of his films. Here she is Tampopo ("Dandelion"), a not entirely successful proprietor of a noodle restaurant. Along comes not Jones but Tsutmu Yamazaki as Goro, a kind of true grit, but big-hearted Japanese urban cowboy. He ambles up to the noodle bar and before long establishes himself as a kind of John Wayne hero intent on teaching Tampopo how the good stuff is made. Along the way Itami makes fun of stuffy bureaucrats, macho Japanese males, heroic death scenes, Japanese princesses attempting to acquire a European eating style, movie fight scenes, and God knows what else.

    The comedy is bizarre at times. The sexual exchange of an egg yoke between the man in the white suit (Koji Yakusho) and his mistress (Fukumi Kuroda) might make you laugh or it might just gross you out. The enthusiastic description of the "yam sausages" from inside a wild boar is strange. Surely one is not salivating at such an entre, but one can imagine that such a "delicacy" might surely exist and have its devotees.

    Indeed an Itami film has a kind of logic all its own. An exemplary scene is that of the stressed and dying mother of two young children, who is ordered by her husband to "Get up and cook!" This (reasonably relevant) scene is juxtaposed with the one with the college professor which is about being and getting ripped off--which seems to have little to do with the rest of the movie, yet somehow seems appropriate, perhaps only because they are at a restaurant. Another typical Itami scene is the businessmen at supper. They hem and haw until their chief orders and then they all pretend to debate and consider, and then order exactly the same thing except for one brash young guy who dazzles (and embarrasses) the old sycophantic guys by order a massive meal in French with all the trimmings.

    The climax of the film comes with plenty of musical fanfare. As Goro and others sit down at the counter, they are served Tampopo's final culinary creation, the noodle soup now hopefully honed to perfection. As the tension mounts, a musical accompaniment, reminiscent of something like the clock ticking in High Noon (1952), rises to a crescendo. All the while Tampopo sweats and frets and prays that she will triumph, which will be in evidence if, and only if, they drain their soup bowls! (Do they?)

    The final credits roll (after some further misdirections and some further burlesque) over a most endearing and ultimately touching shot of a young mother with a beautiful and contented infant feeding at her breast.

    Perhaps this was Itami's best film.

    (Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)
    10intelearts

    A classic of world cinema

    This remains one of the better comedies of all time due to star performances, a superb script, and many, many surprises. Above all, the pacing is some of the best seen in any comedy.

    Tampopo has all the qualities of good story telling: a hero, a disciple, a quest.

    And when your hero is a trucker, the disciple a woman in need of help, and the quest to cook the best noodles then you know you're in for fun.

    In between all this are vignettes on how food and life mingle. It is more than simple laughs there are moments of poignancy, and genuine flights of imagination.

    Many directors could do well to watch the ease with which the camera is handled here: the plot flows beautifully and the switches to the small vignettes are handled with suitable aplomb.

    All in all a three course meal.
    8SnoopyStyle

    strange celebration of food

    Truck driver Gorô and his young sidekick Gun (Ken Watanabe) stop at a rather sad looking noodle shop. They rescue a boy outside from bullies who turns out to be the son of the widowed shop owner Tampopo. Her noodles are not good and she begs Gorô to be her teacher. In desperation, she even tries to buy and steal a soup recipe. They find homeless people who are cooks. With other experts' help, they refine the noodle shop to greater heights. Meanwhile, there is a gangster in a white suit and his girlfriend testing the boundaries of food erotica. Others vignettes also show people with food.

    This is a strange and wonderful celebration of food. The characters are lovely. Gorô is a cowboy of sorts and even has the hat. It treats the noodle with reverence. Not all of the minor vignettes work but they add to the quirkiness. The old lady who squeezes is odd as hell although I wouldn't call it funny. It's an unusual movie wrapped around a sweet noodle story.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The old name of Tampopo's restaurant, when she first meets Gorô and Gan, is Rai Rai Ken. Years later, when the first authentic râmen-ya opened in New York City, it took its name from this scene.
    • Goofs
      When the Gangster in the White Suit examines the oyster the girl has given him, it's obvious that the two shell halves are open almost an inch. This means the oyster has died and the shell is empty. Yet when the girl opens the shell, there's a plump oyster inside.
    • Quotes

      Student of ramen eating: [voiceover] One fine day, an old man and I went out for a bite. He's studied noodles for 40 years and said he'd initiate me into the art.

      Student of ramen eating: Sensei, broth or noodles first?

      Old gentleman: First comtemplate the ramen. Carefully observe the entire bowl while savoring the aroma. The jewels of fat twinkling on the surface, the men shoots glistening with fat, the nori darkening with moisture, the scallions floating on top. Above all, the stars of the show: three slices of roast pork, modestly half submerged. Now, then, with the tips of your chopsticks, smooth out the surface and caress the ramen.

      Student of ramen eating: What for?

      Old gentleman: To express affection. Then point your chopsticks at the roast pork.

      Student of ramen eating: Go straight for the pork?

      Old gentleman: No, at this stage merely tap it. Nudge it lovingly with the tips. Slowly pick it up and nestle it in the broth to the right. This next step is very important. I want you quietly to apologize to the pork. "Until we meet again."

    • Crazy credits
      The entire closing credit sequence is a shot a woman breastfeeding her child; the camera slowly zooms in on the baby's mouth sucking his mother's breast.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Big Easy/The Fourth Protocol/No Way Out/Tampopo (1987)
    • Soundtracks
      Les Préludes, S. 97
      Written by Franz Liszt

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Tampopo?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 25, 1987 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Tampopo: A Ramen Western
    • Production companies
      • Itami Productions
      • New Century Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $224,097
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $16,410
      • Oct 23, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $448,175
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 54 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby

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