Tampopo [NTSC/Region 1&4 dvd. Import - Latin America] by Juzo Itami (Spanish subtitles) - No English options
G**.
Not just a ramen western
ore times without getting bored. When I went to college a lecturer screened clips of it to emphasise the importance of observation as a market research tool - a lesson that has stuck with me to this day. Decades later I get Tampopo on Blu-Ray via Criterion Collection re-issue.The print is way richer and better than what I saw a few times in Liverpool and it still holds my interest.Ramen western?Before we get into the film I want dispel the idea of the ramen western. Every magazine review you see of Tampopo will use the term 'ramen western' which was apparently coined by publicists during its international release. It's a lazy phrase in the case of Tampopo for a number of reasons.Yes, one of the protagonists has some clothing that might evoke the image of a cowboy, but that's like writing the entire film from a few curated still images. The clothing is more about evoking the rugged individuality of a truck driver, in a largely conformist society. Their neckerchief is more about lorry cabs having no air conditioning at the time.The best spaghetti westerns like A Fist Full of Dollars actually were adaptions of Japanese films. In the case of A Fist Full of Dollars, it's the retelling in western setting of the Akira Kurosawa film Yojimbo. So the Ramen Western reference is basically saying 'it's a Japanese interpretation set around a neighbourhood restaurant of an Italian plagarisation of a Japanese samurai film classic'.The reality is that Tampopo is more complex than the simplistic ramen western label would have you believe.Juzo ItamiDirector Juzo Itami was an auteur: actor, script writer and director. Tampopo was his second feature film and he would eventually direct eight more. Itami's later films courted controversy with him being attacked by Yakuza members. His eventual suicide is widely believed to have been staged by members of the yakuza to prevent a film that discussed the gang's links with a buddhist movement.Back to TampopoTampopo revolves around food as art and food is also the MacGuffin for the film. In the main story, a widow is struggling to manage her ramen shop following the death of her husband the cook and shop owner.A jobbing truck driver and drivers mate stop to eat and get sucked into a quest. The widow who is named Tampopo (Japanese for Dandelion), the truck driver and driver's mate to make great ramen and rejuvenate the fortunes of the shop.So if Tampopo isn't a ramen western, what is it?The simple answer would be an action comedy revolving around a ramen shop and the art of cooking. But there is so much more in the film.There is a second story about 'the man in white' which has heavy overtones of French new wave cinema and features a basket of European food fit for a decadent picnic. The fourth wall is broken and one of the characters speaks directly to the audience, adding an additional layer of complexity. We are both audience and (minor) character. Over new wave vignettes in the film include:Salarymen having a meal at a French restaurant A women's etiquette class on how to eat spaghetti silently in the European mannerSupermarket staff stopping an older woman with a compulsion to squeeze foodA con man uses an elaborate meal to lure a mark into an scamA woman breast feeds her infantTorakku YarōThere are references due to the plot structure to the idea of the ronin - the unattached samurai helping out common people in the plot structure. But just as important the film references Japanese culture around that time. There is a clear parallel between Tampopo and a series of trucking related comedy films that were made from 1974 - 1979. Torakku Yarō which roughly translates as Truck Guys or Truck Rascals. It is a series of ten films made over a four year period to cater for the popularity of the genre.The plots were standardised.Truck driver falls in love with woman he meets on the road.Truck driver through his actions actually helps her fall in love with another man.Truck driver ends up going on a quest to help reunite the star-crossed lovers under some sort of time restriction.In this case cooking ramen is substituted for the 'other man'. The connections don't stop at the plot structure, one of the main characters Pisken is played by Japanese Italian actor Rikiya Yasuoka - who appeared in the first instalment of the Torakku Yarō series.Torakku Yarō itself was based on an earlier series of comedies called Otoko wa Tsurai yo: translated as It's tough being a man. 48 films were made in this series from 1969 to 1995 based around the same formula.Tora-san falls in love with a womanTora-san argues with his extended familyTora-san's love of the woman is not reciprocated and he leaves heart-brokenWhile the humour may not fully come out from Tompopo, it's a visual tour-de-force with great acting and a distinctive vision behind the film. I look forward to rewatching it again in the future.
L**N
Fantastic food film
This 1985 movie from Japan hasn't aged one bit. It is one of those movies that keeps wetting your appetite, and when it's over, all you want is a plate of ramen. Meanwhile, it's full if entertaining characters acting out a great story or two.
S**U
Delectable presentation of a delicious film
Juzo Itami's film is a sweet, funny, romantic sometimes bizarre but always delectable ode to the multi-layered and multi-flavored relationship between man (or woman) and food.The film's title (which means Dandelion) comes from the name of the protagonist, a middle-aged widow with a bullied kid, struggling to run the Ramen restaurant left by her husband. When cowboy trucker Goro (and his buddy Gun) enter her life after having saved the kid from a beating and fended off her coercive suitor, she finds in their honest criticism of her cooking a chance to improve her skill and make a better life for herself. Goro (and a host of other people, including a band of gourmet hobos) come together to aid Tampopo in honing her craft and and push her to achieve her own holy grail of Ramen.Intersecting this main artery are several vignettes with other characters, all of which explore the almost spiritual importance of food in our lives: In a delicious jab at the culture of subservience and lack of individuality, a junior executive embarrasses his protocol-slave bosses by ordering a stand-out lavishly flavorful meal at a company lunch after all of them have opted for identical bland fare. Another episode shows a sick woman cooking a final family dinner before she drops dead. In some we see people going to desperate, even life-threatening extents to satisfy their food indulgences. Weirdness comes in the thread where a gangster and his moll indulge in kinky food-meets-sex games, including repeatedly passing a raw egg yolk between their lips till it breaks.With this wonderful smorgasbord, Itami, himself a gourmet, expresses his philosophy of food with an almost reverent air. The technical aspects of the film, its visuals and sounds, are dedicated to the service of this meditation. This was one of the early films to have a dedicated food stylist. Assuming you're not a vegan/vegetarian that gets offended by the very sight of animal food (and in one scene a young turtle is killed on camera), I dare you to watch it on an empty stomach without drooling. Like warm soup on a rainy day the film is very cheering, and the plot thread of the gangster with its kinky sex and weird metaphors for virginity is about the only thing that keeps it from being recommended as family fare.Coming off a fresh 4K restoration, the film looks and sounds mouth-watering on Criterion's blu-ray (I got the region B-locked UK release). Apart from the main feature, there's a vintage 90 min making of, hosted by director Itami himself. There are also new interviews with the lead actress (his wife), the food stylist and featurettes about the legacy of the film (including one that talks to a bunch of Ramen noodle restauranters). The cover unfolds as a full-size poster on the back of which is a single decent though not very essential essay.
A**Y
Wonderful movie
Although a huge fan of Japanese cinema, I hadn't yet seen this wonderfully energetic movie about a Ramen restaurant and Japanese food culture. It's aged a little in regard to production values but great characters and tons of humour keep it feeling as fresh as a plate of sushi.
M**R
Lovely Blu Ray edition of a quirky 80s film
Tampopo is an off beat Japanese movie from the 1908s. It's all about food, and running through it is the story of a Ramen bar owner - Tampopo of the title - and her quest to become the best Ramen chef on the block. Spoiler alert - with the help of a truck driver who happens to pass by one rainy night for a bowl of Ramen, she succeeds. That's after an odyssey of encounters with rival Ramen chefs and their secret recipes, and which entails lovingly filmed expositions of the various arts of Ramen. Along the way there are a score of myriad diversions into often surreal food based cameo scenes, often beginning with the camera wandering off from the main characters to follow some other group of characters who just happen to be passing.So the director tells us, in the 90 minute making of documentary that comes with main movie - a very informative scene-by-scene account of the intellectual and practical processes that underlie his film. And on top of that, there are cast interviews.The film itself is here reproduced at excellent quality resolution - worthy of this very entertaining, intelligent and playful Japanese classic.
S**A
Good Quality Blu Ray
Picture Quality was great. Comes with original Mono Lossless Audio. Perfect scores from me.
M**A
Genial
Buen empaque viene con un poster en el interior
A**R
A classic...
When I first watched this movie during my university years, I loved it. It was so Monty Pythonie. Outrageous, with a tongue in cheek commentary on food and the various ways it is relished. The portions where Tampopo is being drilled like a martial artist/athlete is so funny. The various stories interweaving with each other was to me right out of a Monty Python style-book. While it is not to be taken too seriously, there are little gems that can be gleaned to take note of, or for your next culinary experience. Glad I bought it. As one of the reviewers mentioned, though, it is not a movie for the family. Or you could just skip those portions with your remote.
R**Y
film japonais absolument génial
Comédie western sur la nourriture prenant place au Japon dans les années 80. Le petites scénettes sur la mort, le sexe, la famille sont très touchantes ou marrantes
J**N
Ingen subtitled in English
Enligt recensioner skulle det finnas japanskt språk och engelsk subtitles. Det finns endast japansk språk och fransk subtitles. Tyvärr var det lögn!
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