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Showing posts with label Ristorante Paradiso. Show all posts

Showing posts with label Ristorante Paradiso. Show all posts

Review: Ristorante Paradiso (Sub)

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The main cast of Ristorante Paradiso (Claudio and Nicoletta in bottom left) Medium: TV Anime
Number of Episodes: 12
Genres: Drama, Romance
Director: Mitsuko Kase
Original Creator: Natsume Ono
Studio: David Production
Version Reviewed: Crunchyroll simulcast
Airdate: April 8, 2009 - June, 2009 (JPN/US)
Rated: Unrated (appropriate for 13+)

When Ani-Gamers originally mentioned Ristorante Paradiso, Vampt Vo and I dismissed it as a pointless reverse-harem jōsei with little redeeming value. After accidentally watching the first episode four times, I found myself drawn to this slice-of-life romantic comedy and its dry sense of humor. With its simple plot and quiet, likable characters, this 12-episode manga adaptation became my private sanctuary amidst all the ninjas and melodrama of Crunchyroll's spring 2009 season.

Our protagonist is Nicoletta, a young woman visiting Rome on a mission: to find her mother. While wandering the back streets of choppy, blocky 3D animation, she discovers the restaurant Casetta Dell’Orso (meaning “a little bear’s house”), where her mother dates the owner, Lorenzo. Driven by curiosity and bubbling self-righteousness, Nicoletta finds her mother amid a team of older gentlemen, all wearing glasses. Once mother and daughter are reunited, Nicoletta’s mother, free-spirited and childish Olga, agrees to keep their relationship secret from the gentlemen with glasses so as not to ruin her life with Lorenzo. Their solution: give Nicoletta a job at the restaurant, surrounded by gentlemen wearing glasses.

Ordinarily, the glasses detail would mean nothing; but the fact that the writer injects this fact again and again gives the viewer an overdose of kind, older men. Which means somebody must find this appealing.

This is Japan – they can fetishize anything.

Few folks under the age of eighteen are going to enjoy this series. The appeal of a subtle, slow series like Ristorante Paradiso is watching the characters grow, and indeed they do grow. Nicoletta trains diligently as a chef while battling against her intense feelings for one of the waiters, Claudio, a kind divorcer who refuses to remove his old wedding ring. Along the journey, we delve briefly into the pasts of the other five waiters, though very little is actually flashed back to; the director keeps as much in the present as possible.

As mentioned above, the art is sacrificed in favor of sad CG roads and backgrounds, although some of the painted panoramic shots of Rome are very well done, setting the perfect romanticized scene, as if the sun itself was lit by candlelight. The soft focus and dim lighting are overused. Nevertheless, this series is about Italian hospitality, and that means food. The food of Ristorante Paradiso deserves some kind of award...or a layer of Parmesan cheese. The apartments feel lived-in, the restaurant itself feels warm and welcoming. But the character design throw me off: the eyes are TOO big, even compared to shōjo, and the extra-long mouths make the characters have elongated, twisted smiles, like trolls from a children’s book.

Ristorante deals with issues of love, both unrequited and long-lost. While we center on Nicoletta’s inability to openly confess to Claudio (a task that would be the center for any high school shōjo), the story pulls back to reveal every character’s doubt with love, even for the characters who have lasting relationships. Once the main course is cleared, this is a simple and soft series with a wide palette for hospitality, Rome, and men with glasses. There, I’ve proven my sensitive side. Now let us never speak of it again and go back to panties and giant robots.



average.

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Ani-Gamers Podcast #014 - Offensive to Pretty Much Everyone

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Kuniko Houjou from Shangri-La

Hosts: Evan "Vampt Vo" Minto, Karl "Uncle Yo" Custer
Topics: Natsu no Arashi (2009), Shikabane Hime: Kuro (2009), Ristorante Paradiso (2009), Shangri-La (2009)

The formidable Uncle Yo makes his triumphant return to the podcast to help with our Spring 2009 Anime Season preview (and to insult Russians, theatre-goers, pink-haired people, and pretty much everybody else). We've got four different anime up for discussion, as well as our usual "What'cha Been Doing?" and "Link of the Day" segments.

Oh yeah, Evan mentions in this episode that we have a contest going on. If you were unclear on how the rules work, go ahead and read up on them in the show notes, or send us an email to clarify.

And as a final note: Our next episode will most likely feature the awesome voice actor/podcaster Kyle Hebert as a guest-host. That is, as long as Evan can find a chance to play Street Fighter IV, the topic of our upcoming discussion. Look forward to it.

Show notes and links can be found after the break.

DIRECT DOWNLOAD - RSS Feed - iTunes - Send us Feedback! - More episodes


(Runtime: 55 minutes, 19 seconds)


[0:00:00] Intro: Stephen Totilo, MTV Multiplayer blogger, who resigns from that post as of...today! This makes us sad.

[0:00:06] Opening Song: "R.O.D Theme" by Taku Iwasaki (R.O.D. OVA opener)

[0:00:18] Hey hey, welcome to the show. We do some con talk at the beginning. Karl's been performing at Animeland Wasabi (Denver) and Tekkoshocon (Pittsburgh), while Evan just ran a panel at Castle Point Anime Convention in Hoboken. Watch the second half of the panel here! Evan also pimps two podcasts. One is Luke and Elliot's Bearfighting Extravaganza (link below), since we got a nice email from the titular Elliot, who listens to our show. The other one is the Anime 3000 Panel, where Evan guest-hosted on the season opener.

[0:06:16] What'cha Been Doing? Karl's watching Shikabane Hime: Aka and White Album, and playing Mirror's Edge. Evan's watching Cyber City Oedo 808, reading Schoolgirl Milky Crisis (which you can win a copy of in our contest!), and playing a bunch of stuff that he already talked about in previous episodes.

[0:11:33] Break: "Kimi Shinitamō Koto Nakare" by May'n (Shangri-La opener)

[0:12:23] Discussion: Spring 2009 Anime Season. We talk about four different 2009 spring season anime: Natsu no Arashi, Shikabane Hime: Kuro (yeah, it's not technically the spring season, but just roll with it), Ristorante Paradiso, and Shangri-La. Highlights of this segment include: strawberry bombs, zombie kisses, and a giant tank-cutting boomerang.

[0:47:57] Promo: Luke and Elliot's Bearfighting Extravaganza

[0:48:20] Links of the Day: Karl proclaims his love for humor site Cracked.com, and links to a fake script by Michael Bay for Transformers 2. There may or may not be transforming boobs in the script. Evan can't get over how funny this Mega64 "Cosplayers" video is. "Wheeled Beast Cosplays!!"

[0:52:56] That's it! Show's over, buddy! Review us on iTunes. Enter our contest! (Oh right, should probably mention the rules right now) "Schoolgirl Milky Crisis" is a made-up anime title that Jonathan Clements uses throughout his essays. Pretend that it's a real anime, and write up a brief plot summary (it can be one sentence if you want) describing what its about. Send it either in audio or text form (via email). And make it funny, because we're grading on how funny it is. Got it, punk?!

[0:54:46] Ending Song: "WORLD END Instrumental" by FLOW (Code Geass R2 second opener)

[0:55:07] Outro: Boobs. No, seriously.

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