Japanese food movies always reveal the style of Japanese photography, which is refreshing and healing. What’s great about the plot is that the screenshots are postcard-like with stunningly beautiful scenes. Here are a few Japanese movies recommended.
Healing food movie.
1. Little Forest Little Forest tells the story of a peach blossom garden. The protagonist of the story, Ichiko, broke up with her boyfriend and could not integrate into the life of the big city. She chose to return to the village of Komori where she grew up, and followed the instructions for her mother.
Memories, sowing in spring and harvesting in autumn, connect the years with food.
The cooking process is shot in every detail, the pace is slow but not procrastinating, and the lines are few but seem to convey a lot. Watching it can magically soothe your tired and irritable heart in the city.
The small forest is divided into summer and autumn chapters and winter and spring chapters. It has nothing to do with intrigues and fights between you and me. It just returns to nature and explains a few food recipes seriously.
One house, one field, one person, one meal, one meal at a time, and a way of integrating with nature to live a different kind of life from the city.
Toasted bread, sour rice wine, argan jam, canned tomatoes, walnut rice, chestnuts in syrup... The crew follows the changes of the seasons to shoot the flavors and dishes that are most suitable for this season.
If you are feeling inexplicably frustrated, I really recommend you hide under the covers and calm down and take a look at this little forest. I believe you will not be disappointed.
2. Corner Confectionery Shop In a corner of bustling Tokyo, there is a confectionery shop called Coin de Rue. Natsume Usba, a girl from Kagoshima, came here to look for her boyfriend who aspires to become a famous pastry chef.
ocean.
However, Ahai was not at the corner confectionery shop as mentioned in her letter. Natsume, who was unaccompanied in Tokyo, decided to stay and work in the store to continue looking for her boyfriend. At first, her poor skills were criticized by her colleagues, but Natsume did not
I gave up and continued to improve my skills, and even met and got to know the legendary pastry chef Tomura Ryotaro, who was warm, healing and a little inspirational.
"Why don't you give up? I will never run away."
Some people describe Yu Aoi's face as like a small fresh wild daisy, giving people a healing feeling like the spring breeze blowing on their face. They also recommend her role in another food drama "Cooking Fairy".
3. Late Night Canteen Everyone is familiar with Late Night Canteen. It is a restaurant that only opens at 12 o'clock in the middle of the night. The diners who come and go bring their stories of joys and sorrows.
The boss uses the available ingredients to create dishes that customers want. They are not as fierce as a scar on his face, but are reliable and steady.
Those who drag their tired bodies late at night not only eat here, but also pursue a kind of spiritual communication and tranquility.
Stripper Marilyn, unknown singer Miyuki, a couple who likes to eat natto... red sausages and egg yolks, chazuke rice, ramen... the stories of food and people are intertwined, adding a bit of friendship.
Late Night Diner has been popular among countless people from comics to drama versions to movie versions, and it has its own connotation.
The movie Yotsukiyoto Pudding tells a time-travel story. A samurai who traveled through time in ancient times became a wagashi confectionery maker. He also met a modern single mother and spent a happy and warm life with her and her son Yuya.
time.
The desserts that appear in the film are far more than just pudding. After becoming proficient in the craftsmanship, the samurai and Tomoya participated in a father-son handmade pastry competition, spending ten hours building an Edo-era castle cake.
The fortitude and strength of being a samurai are unified with the delicacy and skill in making pudding. The whole film has a subtle warmth, which is simple but touching.
5. Happy Bread "Happy Bread" tells the story of Mizuto and his wife who moved from Tokyo to Hokkaido and opened a coffee shop in Hokkaido. They also made handmade pastries and provided accommodation.
During the operation, some lovelorn women found true love here, some little girls and their fathers came here to remember their deceased mothers, and some dying old couples spent the last part of their lives peacefully and warmly here.
Whenever a guest is in a bad mood, the couple always has a way of making soothing pastries to revive their spirits.
What impressed me deeply was that the film also restored the process of glass bottles, and the glass blowing lady gave the glass jars a beautiful blessing meaning.
After watching the movie, I felt like I was wandering between ideal and reality. Sometimes happiness is actually not that complicated. It is very simple, as simple as a delicious whole wheat bread.
6. Seagull Restaurant "Seagull Restaurant" This film tells the story of a middle-aged Japanese woman who opened a restaurant called "Seagull" on a street corner in Helsinki, the capital of Finland, and used rice balls as her signature dish to attract diners.
During the gradual operation, two more Japanese women came to help. One of them was even attracted by the smell of cinnamon coming from the restaurant.
The film's description of details is very moving, from the song of the fat seagull to the crisp sound of coins, and even the murmur of the fat cat, it can be engraved in your mind.
The lines between the characters are also very simple, but transparent. I always feel that the more you smack it, the more you can appreciate a different philosophy of life.
The picture is super beautiful.
“No matter where you go, sad people will still be sad, and lonely people will still be lonely.