Current:Home > StocksCozy up in Tokyo's 'Midnight Diner' for the TV version of comfort food -Finovate
Cozy up in Tokyo's 'Midnight Diner' for the TV version of comfort food
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-06 13:22:51
Since the strikes began in Hollywood, the usual torrent of new shows has slowed to a trickle. People keep asking me what older shows they should watch. Was there anything great that they might have missed along the way? You know, something they would love as much as they loved The Bear.
I always recommend Midnight Diner, the strangely addictive Japanese series whose 24-minute episodes unfold with the lazy looseness of happy hour. Now, the show is anything but hot or zeitgeisty. It first appeared on Netflix seven years ago and hung around for so long that, a few months back, the streamer stopped showing the first three seasons, leaving its huge, loyal fan base bereft. You see, part of Midnight Diner's appeal is that it's one of those timeless shows that's always there for you. Suddenly, it wasn't.
Happily, the show is now back on Netflix in its entirety, and like millions of others, I haven't been able to resist re-watching. The show's setting is a dimly lit alleyway in the teeming Tokyo neighborhood of Shinjuku. There you find the Midnight Diner, a small, all-night joint run by the chef known only as Master, played by a quietly charismatic Kobayashi Kaoru, whose stony countenance is broken by flickers of amusement and compassion.
Master's counter is filled with regulars, including an exotic dancer named Marilyn, the cheery old boozer who's her biggest fan, a besuited salaryman who moves like a bird, three high-spirited bachelorette office workers and a self-styled monk who utters nonsensical aphorisms.
The episodes have the simplicity of folk tales or dinner party anecdotes. In each, we meet new characters — cartoonists, con women, cops, yakuza, old married couples and lovestruck youngsters — who ask the Master to cook them a particular off-the-menu dish: wieners cut in the shape of octopi, say, or potato salad like their mom's.
Although modest, each dish means something big to the person who orders it. And these meals anchor the action as we, like Master and his regulars, follow the newcomers' fortunes — failed careers and overnight successes, romances found and lost, old wounds opened and transcended.
The original Midnight Diner was a purely Japanese concoction that ran for three seasons, starting in 2009. By American standards, those episodes were shambling, low-budget and uncynical. That changed a bit when Netflix started producing the series in 2016, changing the name to Midnight Diner: Tokyo Stories and making it a bit more like our homegrown TV, with slicker storylines and less reticence from the Master. Still, the show never lost what makes it irresistible.
Goofy and gently sad, Midnight Diner liberates you from angry politics, trashy reality stars and dramas about serial killers. It lands you in a universe where, even if bad things happen, the world is manageable and essentially benevolent. It creates a kindly mood that even a hard-bitten critic like me wants to enter, starting with one of the most seductive opening credit sequences of all time — taxis gliding through Tokyo neon, the dreamy theme by Suzuki Tsunekichi and, in a calm voice-over, the Master telling us about his diner. I never, ever skip these credits.
Even as the show is funny and attuned to Japanese obsessions, it taps into something deep and universal, a modern spiritual homesickness. Not only is Master a mysterious loner with no history, but his customers are loners too – either regulars for whom the diner's clientele become a de facto family or troubled souls drawn to his counter in the wee hours.
If anything links the characters, it's nostalgia — for family, for high school, for a lost love or an old-time pop idol. And as Marcel Proust taught us a century ago, nothing triggers memories better than food. It's one of the comical sides of the show that 95% of the customers declare the Master's down-home cooking "delicious" — a success rate that would make him the envy of the world's greatest chefs. Yet we grasp that what they're really tasting is the feeling unleashed by his dishes.
And Midnight Diner pleases us in a similar way. It's the TV version of comfort food.
veryGood! (27)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Montana man gets 18 months in federal prison for repeated racist phone calls made to a church
- A Swiss populist party rebounds and the Greens sink in the election. That’s a big change from 2019
- Detroit synagogue president found murdered outside her home
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Grizzlies' Steven Adams to undergo season-ending surgery for knee injury
- See the Moment Paris Hilton Surprised Mom Kathy With Son Phoenix in Paris in Love Trailer
- Judge orders release of man who was accused of plotting ISIS-inspired truck attacks near Washington
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Detroit police search for suspect, motive in killing of synagogue president Samantha Woll
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- King of the entertainment ring: Bad Bunny now a playable character in WWE 2K23 video game
- 'Full of life:' 4-year-old boy killed by pit bull while playing in Detroit yard
- DeSantis PAC attack ad hits Nikki Haley on China, as 2024 presidential rivalry grows
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- How women finally got hip-hop respect: 'The female rapper is unlike any other entertainer'
- Nashville police chief has spent a career mentoring youths but couldn’t keep his son from trouble
- EPA proposes banning cancer-causing chemical used in automotive care and other products
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Are earthquakes happening more? What to know if you're worried and how to stay safe.
Police in Atlanta suburb pledge full investigation after residents report anti-Semitic flyers
Sen. Menendez returns to New York court to enter plea to new conspiracy charge
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
No fighting! NFL issues memo warning of 'significant' punishment for scuffles
Counting down the NBA's top 30 players for 2023-24 season: Nos. 30-16
More than $1 million in stolen dinosaur bones shipped to China, Justice officials say