Dining Out: A Big Japanese M-eel At Last!

A common gripe amongst foreigners living in Japan is that the portions just aren’t big enough. Sure, the fast food chains come up with the occasional mega sized special but short of eating 20 dishes at the kaiten-zushi (conveyor belt sushi) there’s very little out there by way of Japanese food (size-wise) to satisfy the larger western appetite.

One such place in Tokyo though that serves up very generous portions is ‘Fukugawa Tsuribine’ which is located just a few minutes away on the east side of JR Kunitachi  station (Higashi 1-15-18 2F) which is about 25 minutes west of Shinjuku. This tempura restaurant is closed on Sundays but is open for lunch at 11.30am – 2pm and dinner between 5pm and 9pm.

Whilst in the vicinity recently (for something that will appear on this site in the coming weeks) I thought I’d stop off at this place on my way home to try the giant sea eel which I had read about on the excellent RocketNews24 website only a few days earlier.

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For 1100 yen you can get a whopping 穴子どん (anago-don) which is basically tempura saltwater eel served on a bed of rice, in a bowl This place is quite low-key in that its on the second floor and has a very non-descript sign outside with no picture menu or fashionable English phrases which so many other restaurants use. As I nervously opened the door I was greeted by a couple of friendly girls, who took me to a counter seat once I’d confirmed that it was the right place and that they did sell big anago-don.

A bowl of tofu, small salad and a cup of tea was presented to me as I gave my order and when it arrived a few minutes later I wasn’t disappointed. The anago was so ridiculously huge that it couldn’t even really fit in the bowl. Instead, it was draped across the top of it with another four pieces of vegetable tempura thrown in for good measure!

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After my increasingly common habit of photographing the meal (done for your benefit!), which I did for a couple of minutes, I tucked into the beast and it sure took a while to even get to the rice! The tempura’s coating was a lovely golden brown colour and it had a nice crunchy taste which, together with its sauce, was so satisfying for this hungry foreigner.

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In the end I had to hang my head in shame as my greed got the better of me and I just had to give up. I could have ploughed on but decided to call it quits as it was too much to handle.

Posted in Food & Drink, Quirky Japan | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Meet Tokyo’s……Train Passengers

So here it is then! A sequel to a popular article from SIX years ago! Back in April 2007 I published an article on here about the various characters to be found in Japanese fast food restaurants. After I recently, and rather randomly tweeted a link to that article I was on the train going to work and realised that a similar thing could be applied to the types of person seen on the trains in Tokyo.

First impressions are that all seem efficient and orderly, and it mostly is with the majority either reading, sleeping, playing with their keitai (mobile phone) or just staring into nothingness. However, on closer inspection, as you ride the trains more and more, you start to notice the strange actions of a few individuals including some exclusive-to-Japan behaviour. These people have even prompted the Tokyo Metro to advertise for better standards from its commuters via a pretty bizarre poster campaign over the last five years or so. Here are some of the characters…

Seat Switcher – One of the most common sights is seeing someone shuffle along or even switch sides when the prestigious end seat becomes available.

Seat Hogger – This particular person certainly likes to spread their wings…or rather their legs so that they take up more than the allocated seat space. In a similar vein, anyone who takes up two seats, without being a fat b*stard, is annoying and deserves to be scrutinised in a poster campaign. Oh, thats already been done has it?!!

Standing Sleeper – Self explanatory really but this species is fairly common due to the overcrowding on Tokyo’s trains. They fall asleep like a prisoner hanging on a cross.

Preening Queen – The difference between when this girl gets on and off the train is astounding! She spends the whole journey “putting on her face” and has the skill to continue putting on her eye-liner despite the odd bump and jump here and there.

Home Station Bypasser – So engrossed in their game are they that they don’t even notice that they have missed their intended stop…which is quite a feat in a city with continuous announcements.

Sports Team – You’re sitting on a quiet and fairly empty train and then the doors open and on step the whole Japanese high school sports team with their bags tossed on the floor.

Porn Magazine Reader – In what other country can you get away with reading what basically looks like a porn magazine with either a real model with big boobs or an animated girl with big boobs on the front in some suggestive pose?!!

Drunken Sleeper – Quite possibly the most interesting specimen and the one that attracts the most attention. Us foreigners are particularly fascinated by them and there are even photographic websites out there showing westerners the strange positions and places that drunken Japanese can sleep in.

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Hand Wanderer – Never seen it myself but this pervert (痴漢) is seemingly a fairly common problem for Japanese women and girls. There are even ‘women-only’ carriages on some trains at certain times of the day as a result.

Door Hogger – For some reason, there are certain types who almost want to sniff the doors as the train moves along. This person is ready to burst through the doors as soon as they open. The need to exit first is so important to them that they get off the train at each stop and go to the back of the line on each platform so that they can board last and thus have their position in front of the doors.

Pretend Sleeper – The best way to deal with the possibility of being confronted by a more needy person wanting your seat is of course to just close your eyes and shut it all out. This is a very common sight in the priority seats.

Keitai Whisperer – I’ve always wondered how the person on the other end of the phone can even here these peoples whispers into their mobile phones. In true Japanese fashion, their hand is covering their mouth in an attempt to hide the fact that they are speaking when they shouldn’t be. Instead it just attracts more attention to it!

Studying Schoolgirl – Her intentions are good but whilst studying that essential Eiken exercise she falls asleep. Whilst enjoying a bit of shut-eye the pages of the book turn a few further on or back but she doesn’t seem to realise this on waking up and just continues on obviously not taking in any of what she’s reading.

Beer Guzzler – Often a fairly harmless character but there are a few ojisan who just wanna have a drink of beer on the train no matter what time of day it is.

Newspaper Reader – Confined space. Broadsheet newspaper. The two just don’t mix well. Reading is fine but maybe the reader should have to commit to that one page only during their journey.

Big Backpack Person – With space so limited this person really isn’t a welcome sight. They seem to be determined to keep their backpack on (even if they sit down!) which just gets in the way knocking a few other passengers about a bit in the process.

Diving Salaryman – Whether its diving onto the train as the doors are closing or waking up at his station and stumbling out of the door in time he always seems to make it.

Noise Leakage Lad – The kind of guy (maybe!) probably has their earplugs in from the moment they wake to the time when they go to sleep and probably without speaking to anyone all day.

Lonely Foreigner – The natives sometimes just don’t wanna sit next to the strange foreigner and when they do its often the last choice! You could take it to heart or you could just think of the extra bit of room you’ve got for yourself.

Falling Sleeper – Are they gonna fall to the left or the right? How long is it gonna be until they fall again? Will the person next to them give them a shove? Will they move away? This character is always a fun one to observe.

Posted in Hentai, Japan Life, Quirky Japan | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Gunkanjima In Skyfall: Real Or Fake?

In the 2012 movie ‘Skyfall’, James Bond (Daniel Craig) is seen cruising on a boat (below) with the exotic-looking Sévérine (Bérénice Marlohe) to an abandoned island. Bond is taken prisoner by the crew and delivered to the antagonist Raoul Silva, who is a former MI6 officer that has turned to cyberterrorism having orchestrated the attacks on MI6. We’re led to believe this island is off the coast of Macau but in reality it is actually in the south-west of Japan. Or is it?

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Gunkanjima (formerly known as Hashima) is a small island located about 20 kilometers from Continue reading

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Tokyo Daytripper: The Yokohama Temple Which Featured In A Manic Street Preachers Video

I was absolutely delighted to visit this tranquil, little temple in Yokohama recently and that was of course mainly down to the fact that it once featured in a Manic Street Preachers video (read about that here) back in the early 1990’s. Naturally, you do not need to be a fan of the Welsh band to enjoy these temple grounds!

In order to get to this place by public transport you need to take the east exit of Keikyu Kanazawa Bunkyo station and its a ten minute walk from there. There is a map outside the station and a couple of signs along the route. On arrival you come across a kind of outer gate entrance which then takes you down a long path leading to the real entrance.

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As you go down this path you will see the view below on your left side and just up ahead is the sanmon entrance gate. Shomyoji Temple is open between 9am and 4pm from Tuesday to Sunday.

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There is no entrance fee to get in this place but there is a small museum/library  somewhere in the vicinity which does charge a few hundred yen. As soon as you enter (by going round the entrance gate rather than through it!) you come across two red bridges  crossing a murky brown coloured pond which is full of turtles and the temple buildings are fringed by some lush green vegetation covering the hills. The Main Hall stands in a straight line connecting the gate to the bridge over the pond.

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The temple was originally built in 1260 and was at the height of its prosperity in the early 14th century when the Kanazawa district in Yokohama was the eastern gateway to Kamakura. However, when the Kamakura Period ended its one-and-a-half century rule in 1333 the temple began to lose its old glory with no specific patrons. It managed to survive though due to modest government support thereafter and grateful for that we should be.

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Of course all the buildings seen today in the temple’s grounds were reconstructed or repaired after the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923.

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The beautiful garden with red bridges and pond (called Ajiga-ike or the “Pond of Letter A.”) surrounded by hills on three sides was originally constructed in 1320 and restored in 1987 and somehow took ten years to complete.

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Shakado Hall (below) with its impressive thatched-roof structure lies to the right of the Main Hall and featured quite a bit in the aforementioned rock music video.

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However, Shomyoji is not only worth a visit for the garden and halls but also for the 2km forest walking trail into the hills which is located on the backside of the temple. There are two routes up with (if you’re facing the main temple hall) the steeper, more difficult path to the left. I should add that it is only a 7-8 minute ascend to the top taking you through a couple of graveyards.

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From the top you can see some pretty impressive views across Tokyo Bay including  Yokohama Hakkejima Sea Paradise which is home to the world’s tallest vertical fall amusement ride (107m) as well as Japan’s largest collection of marine life in its aquarium. Although we didn’t, a trip here could easily be combined with this temple.

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It’s fair to say that it won’t take you too long to walk around the 75,000 squared-meter temple area but its a nice place to take a quiet break and relax amid a pleasant setting away from the crowds which can sometimes make living here a frustrating experience.

You can see the Shomyoji filming locations for ‘Motorcycle Emptiness here

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On Screen #1 – Vietnam

In the 1997 movie ‘Tomorrow Never Dies’, James Bond is seen cruising around a series of limestone rock karsts dramatically jutting out of the sea on the 91 minute mark. We’re led to believe its Halong Bay, Vietnam, and though it looks remarkably like that area in

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the north-east of the country it is actually Krabbi in Phuket (Thailand) which we see. Lets rewind further back to the most famous films about Vietnam; ‘Apocalypse Now‘ (1979) and ‘Platoon‘ (1986) which also weren’t made in the country they were obviously set in. Luzon in the Philippines filled in on both occasions.

Good Morning, Vietnam‘ (1987) is a film consisting of more than just a catchphrase! I watched this on YouTube recently (You can see it here) and though I’m not the greatest fan of the rubber-faced funnyman Robin Williams, this is a good movie with some spectacular Vietnamese scenery…….or is it? Well, no actually as this one was filmed in Thalang in Phuket province, Thailand. In fact the Thai Parliament Houses are clearly visible on the horizon in an opening shot of a main road.

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One film which was actually filmed in Vietnam was the 1992 drama romance ‘L’Amant‘ (UK title: ‘The Lover‘) which features Ho Chi Minh City in parts. A student recommended this fairly dark film just before I went on my trip to Vietnam last month and I also managed to catch this one on YouTube (You can see it here)

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Director Jean Jacques Annaud first flew to Ho Chi Minh City in 1989 to view the original novel’s setting and was at first not happy with the state of the country but after looking at other places to film in South-East Asia he decided that only Ho Chi Minh City could truly represent the “tired museum.” It was the first Western film to be shot in ‘nam since the reunification of the country in 1975. The government provided the crew with a helicopter for use during filming but did demand that all production storyboards be checked by officials before being filmed. All of the film’s sexual scenes had to be shot in Paris as they could not be filmed on location. The film cost $30m to produce due to the importation costs of shooting in Vietnam and it took 135 days to complete filming.

My introduction to Vietnam though came from the 1980’s TV series ‘The A-Team‘ which throughout its five season run featured countless references to Vietnam with the most important one being the “crime they didn’t commit.” Colonel Morrison gave orders for the team to rob the Bank of Hanoi of $1m on the 27th of January, 1971. The mission was supposed to help bring the war to an end by cutting off the money supply to the Viet Cong but on their return to HQ the team discovered it had burned to the ground, and that Morrison was murdered by the Viet Cong. All the evidence that they were acting under orders vanished in the fire. This site has a fascinating rundown of all the ‘nam references from the 98 episodes.

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As I mentioned in an A-Team TV series article I wrote a few years ago the season four finale (Episode 23) of this cartoon-violence show was very unique in that it actually included a death and was notable for some truly serious dramatic moments with the A-Team members privately reminiscing on their Vietnam war experiences.

This was the only episode ‘set’ in Vietnam but I have no doubt that it, like just about every other episode, was all filmed at Universal Studios in California. Stick a few conical hats on some Asian-American actors and you’ve got something resembling Vietnam…..seems to have often been the attitude when the country is portrayed on screen. In this episode titled ‘The Sound Of Thunder‘ major antagonist General Fulbright wants the team to find and free a group of Vietnam POWs, that supposedly includes the only officer that can clear their names.

During the job Fulbright finds out that Murdock is part of the A-Team, but during their narrow escape under fire Fulbright is killed by Vietnamese troops before telling anyone else. The episode borrows heavily from ‘Apocalypse Now‘ in terms of the team lying under a fan with its sound turning into the ‘nam chopper blade whirring sound.

One more memorable TV show I recall watching which was set in Vietnam was a BBC ‘Top Gear‘ special a few years back and this time the only think faked was the scripts and plot of the three presenters as they fell into each situation. The three presenters had $1000 each to spend on a vehicle to get from Ho Chi Minh City to Halong City in 8 days. Naturally, all they could get for that kind of money were some cheap motorbikes and then hilarity and adolescent humour ensues as they made their journey. Now, I’m no car fan and don’t watch this show usually but am always keen to see the special shows.

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Other tv show’s to have featured Vietnam are ‘Man Vs Wild with Bear Grylls‘ (Season 4 Episode 3) where the chief scout himself demonstrates what it was like for soldiers who had to survive in the jungles of Vietnam, during the Vietnam War.

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It’s thanks to Anthony Bourdain’s TV series’ ‘No Reservations‘ that I have developed an interest in international cuisine over the last year or so. He’s a big fan of Vietnam and did three shows (S01E04, S05E10, S06E10) there in his seven year run for the Travel Channel.

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I’m sure there have been plenty of other TV programmes and movies set or made in this beautiful country but this was just a sample and its probably Bourdain’s shows which gave me the most realistic insight into the local culture and cuisine.

Posted in Films, TV Shows | Tagged , , , , , , | 17 Comments

Teaching Kids To Read Via A Penalty Shoot-Out!

You’d think that after the penalty heartbreak suffered by Leicester City in the Play Offs last month that the last thing on my mind would be more penalties but this is a game to be used as an additional resource in English lessons for young learners ranging from Kindergarten to Lower Elementary or Higher Elementary.

To give you a bit of backstory, I bought a ‘Match Of The Day‘ annual four years ago for one of my students and inside was a game which I photocopied before handing over the gift. The basis of the game was just a dice roll with each number deciding whether its a miss or a goal. My initial thought was that this was a bit too simple and boring but that with a bit of a facelift it could be applied to helping kids learn to read.

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This game features Premiership stars like Manchester United’s Wayne Rooney (pre-hair transplant) and the recently retired Michael Owen in a Newcastle shirt. It can be played on the table, floor or even the board with the students maybe doing their own scoring regarding a tick/circle or cross. If you need to make it slightly easier then you can place  the number word flashcards (in order) under the sheet to help the students with word recognition.

This game may only teach kids how to read or recognise number words one to six but there’s no reason why it can’t be adapted to include colour words, phonemic sounds, adjectives of emotion or any lexical items. More balls could easily be added but remember that a dice only has 6 sides and 12 (2 dice) is an awful lot of balls! Of course you would also need to put a key on the board detailing what each number correlates to! The game could even serve its original purpose which was just numbers and that could be used as a warmer/warm-down activity or to teach playgroup level students how to read numbers. Whilst I always have this copy to hand, it isn’t so necessary, as a simple matchstick and goalposts drawing on the whiteboard can easily be substituted in its place.

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Naturally, when I have to join in the fun in private one-to-one lessons I invariably try and lose to keep the student happy but its quite hard to fix this game (though I’m sure I still could!) as the result against one of my students below shows!

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Overall, this simple game has been my most successful game/activity for motivating the young kids to bother taking the effort to try and read or recognise the words. He shoots, he scores! Game on!

Posted in English Teaching, Sport | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Is This Really A Statue Of ‘Oddjob’ from ‘Goldfinger’?!!

Mention Bond villains and most people probably tend to think of Blofeld (You Only Live Twice), Jaws (The Spy Who Loved Me), Dr No (Dr No), Scaramanga (The Man With The Golden Gun), Nick Nack (The Man With The Golden Gun) and Goldfinger (Goldfinger). There are many other classic bad guys who probably deserve to be on that list and and one of the strongest and most brutal (according to my 007 Top Trump cards information data!) is Oddjob who was Auric Goldfinger’s manservant in the 1964 film ‘Goldfinger‘.

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Displaying a perfect combination of strength, skill and loyalty Oddjob knew seven ways to kill a man with just one blow and as well as his unusual appearance and manners he formed the archetype for which many henchmen of the Bond film series were based on. His sharpened, steel-brimmed bowler hat became a famous and much-parodied trademark of the Bond series. Oh and he could also crush a golf ball with one hand!

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Last month a friend of mine walked alongside the Kanda River one day on a mission reminiscent of when I cycled the length of the river back in 2011. One of the photos which he posted on Facebook particularly fascinated me and that was what appeared to be a rather random statue commemorating Toshiyuki “Harold” Sakata who played the aforementioned ‘Oddjob’ in ‘Goldfinger‘.

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Although the character is Korean, the actual actor is Japanese-American and was born in the USA where he went on to be an Olympic weightlifter and professional wrestler and then a film actor of Japanese descent.

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This bizarre statue is located round-about Nishishinjuku 5-1-3 and is just a stones throw away from the temple featured in ‘Lost In Translation (2003). It is on the ground floor of a private apartment (so please respect privacy and all that) just before the second bridge if you follow the Kanda River from Yamate Dori (route 317) heading in the direction of the Sumida-gawa river where the river starts…or ends if you like.

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Is this really a statue of him? There is some kind of faded inscription on the statue but I couldn’t read it and didn’t really wanna lean too far over the tenants balcony to catch it on film for someone to translate. The sunlight shining through onto the statue didn’t help  make things any clearer. It seems like it has almost been abandoned but given that his nationality it’s not impossible that it could well be him. I’d sure like to think that it is, and given that the third Bond film is one of just a few 007 films to have eluded me so far on the filming locations front, this may be as close as I get to anything  ‘Goldfinger‘ related!

Sakata died of liver cancer in Hawaii in 1982 and Oddjob may have quite literally died a shocking death but in this small statue he lives on in Tokyo overlooking one of Tokyo’s nicest rivers.

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Music Videos Filmed In Japan #5 Muse – ‘Panic Station’ (2013)

The music video for ‘Panic Station‘ by perennial live favourites Muse was filmed in January 2013 in Tokyo during their tour of their 6th studio album ‘2nd Law.‘ This is the 5th song to be lifted from that album and is supposedly the first one by the Devonshire band to include profanity as it contains the line “Do what the f*ck you want to.”

The original video irked many YouTube users as it featured the rising sun flag (below) in the intro which was originally used as the war flag of the Imperial Japanese Army until the end of World War II and is considered offensive by some who associate it with Japanese militarism. It is actually still employed by the Japan Self-Defense Forces and appears in many advertisements. However, after an apology from the band it was later replaced with the Japanese flag and could be read as ‘Panikusu te-shiyon’ as the layout of the katakana script displayed on the video shows.

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As for locations, this was the easiest of the ‘Music Videos Filmed In Japan‘ series on this site as it only really involved two places. The first one is the inevitable and overly-used Shibuya crossing (below) on 0:37 followed by the band fooling about on Center Gai street and Udagawa-cho which runs parallel to it. The music video was apparently intended to be light-hearted in tone, with the band members and a few costumed extras roaming around dressed as ‘cowboy ravers’ and other fancy dress creations.

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Next up is the ‘Randa‘ store at 16-8 Udagawacho (below) where bassist Chris Wolstenholme is leaning against a motorcycle on 0:54.

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Just a stone’s throw up Udagawacho on the right is a thin lane known as Spain-zaka which  is a short slope between Inokashira-dori and the ‘PARCO‘ malls. A couple of shots of drummer Dominic Howard can be seen on 1:00 and 1:06 with places like ‘Bistrot Gourmand‘ (16-14 Udagawacho) and ‘Party Land‘ (13-4 Udagawacho) in the background.

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Back on Center Gai, singer Matt Bellamy features in a couple of clips where he is walking along the shopping street (below) outside the ‘Family Mart‘ convenience store which is across from the fast food chain ‘First Kitchen‘ and its bright orange frontage.

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Dominic is seen almost sneakily coming out of a hentai manga place (below) on 1:30 next to a sushi restaurant and on a small road between Centre Gai and Udagawacho with ‘Pronto‘ Cafe at the end of it. This is the 2nd lane on the right as you start off on Center Gai coming from the world’s busiest crossing outside the Hachiko Exit of Shibuya station.

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Returning to Center Gai, Matt has now made it a few steps further along and is outside ‘Burger King’ (below) on 1:33 with the yellow signed ‘Matsuya’ (Japanese beef-bowl chain) on the right.

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The weirdness of the costumes continues as a guy dressed up in a Halloween-type costume (below) gives chase to Chris on 1:51.

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Halfway through the video (2:16) the action moves onto the ‘Robot Restaurant‘ (below) which can be found at 1-7-1 Kabukicho in Shinjuku-ku and with an entrance cost of 5000 yen (£32) I won’t be rushing to get in here. As it is on the second basement floor (B2) I can’t even really get a picture of it from outside so as a rather poor substitute I have photographed the place where you buy tickets for the restaurant at the same address so presumably its beneath here somewhere! One of the photos is of the Robot truck which drives round Tokyo promoting the restaurant. Those of you with limited knowledge of Tokyo should be aware (or may be interested to know!) that this is located in the “entertainment” and red-light district and is full of host/hostess bars, love hotels and so on.

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The video does end back on Center Gai in Shibuya with some black and white out-takes (below) included of singer Matt Bellamy and drummer Dominic Howard. Both were shot at the same spot albeit from different angles with ‘ABC Mart‘ and ‘Bershka‘ stores featuring prominently in the background of both.

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Posted in Japan Filming Locations, Music, Quirky Japan | Tagged , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Dining Out: Caravan Sarai (Afghanistan)

“Dictation being forced in Afghanistan…” is the opening lyric to the Pet Shop Boys 1988 hit ‘It’s Alright‘ (video still below) and the first time I’d really ever heard of the place not that I would have been able to point it out on the map at the time!

The Soviet war in Afghanistan in support of a communist regime had already been going on for about seven years when the song was penned. The “dictation” most probably refers to the Afghan regime implementing a variety of highly repressive measures including suppression of religion and the closing of mosques. In the balance of fairness, there were also a number of positive reforms designed to modernize the country.

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By coincidence, on the same day we went to this restaurant I had actually been teaching a student some stuff about Afghanistan. In unit 2 of the god-awful Clockwise Intermediate book there is half a page (above) about change in this Central Asian country including a listening section about a 1997 news item. It basically focuses on the Taliban Movement since 1996 and their extreme dislike of Western influences which led to bans of TV, music and cinemas as they were considered un-Islamic. This was part of the Taliban’s attempts to free the country from such influences which led to some kind of discussion about how the States influences Japan and what kind of things should be banned here.

Furthermore, I was lying in bed listening to an old BBC Radio 4 podcast the other week where an aid worker who worked in Afghanistan both during and after the Taliban period was being interviewed. It was an episode of ‘Excess Baggage‘ from May 2011 and it was  during this episode that I felt a strong desire to vomit but that was purely because it was pretty much the start of my illness and nothing to do with taste for the country! Far from it, as within days of my recovery I took my girlfriend for dinner at this Afghan restaurant.

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When I moved into my new place I came across this restaurant one day whist exploring the surrounding areas. ‘Caravan Sarai‘ is at 2-25-6 Higashi Nakano and is just a 20 minute walk down the road from the ‘Lost In Translation‘ (2003) temple. With two entrances this restaurant is part of the PAO Compound which is home to other ethnic activity such as the Egyptian belly dance show that was on the night we went there. The name derives from a roadside inn where travellers could rest and recover from a days journey with particular regard to the flow of commerce and people along the Silk Road.

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They have a fairly extensive menu and first up we had a Yoghurt drink (above) which was lovely and that was soon followed by the delicious sikh kebabs (below) which were served up on a massive long steel skewer.

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The gyouza-like dish above is known as Afghan-manto which came covered in sour cream sauce and boy were they awesome. With such an amazing texture you really will have a hard time finding a more perfectly constructed food item. Naturally I could have eaten far more than the five we were given.

It seems that a dish called Pashton Karahi is the national dish as that was the most expensive high profile dish on the menu. At 2300 yen my girlfriend and I decided that it was out of our price range. Instead we had a couple of karahi dishes (with naan) such as karahi hitsuji (sheep) for 880yen and lamb spare rib karahi for 1200 yen. A karahi is a type of deep, thick, circular cooking-pot (similar in shape to a wok) which is used to prepare stew dishes, usually with tomatoes (much to my dislike!), and they are named after the utensil itself.

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As I mentioned before the menu is quite large and if you want to have one of the courses you actually have to make a reservation three days in advance which is I guess so they have time to get the ingredients in. The place was fairly busy when we went one Saturday evening with a few groups congregated in the floor seating room whilst us non-bookers had to sit either at the counter or the table seen in the pictures below.

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Of course my main reason for going to ‘Caravan Sarai‘ was to tick it off my list of ethnic cuisines eaten in the vicinity of Tokyo but thankfully it was more than that as we had an interesting experience in a place full of character.

Posted in English Teaching, Food & Drink, Middle East Travel | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Zojoji Temple a.k.a. The Wolverine Temple

So this is a bit of a first then as Tokyo Fox presents you with some filming locations for a movie that hasn’t even come out yet!! ‘The Wolverine‘ is the sixth installment in the X-Men film series and it is released at the end of July in most countries apart from Japan of course where the locals have to wait till mid-September. It’s fairly common that Japan is the last country to see an international film released but perhaps a bit surprising given that Tokyo features quite prominently.

Scenes were shot in late August 2012 at Tokyo Tower and Zojoji Temple which can be seen quite a bit in the trailer which is where I got the screenshots below from. The Main Hall is used for a funeral scene and it looks quite different from normal with the addition of lots of lanterns and cars going by where I’m standing, in presumably some sort of funeral procession. The Wolverine/Logan (Hugh Jackman) and Yukio are seen climbing the steps of the Main Hall with the sanmon (main gate) visible in the background.

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Despite the Star Wars obsession on this site I’m not actually such a big fan of sci-fi films or even comic book heroes but any regular reader of Tokyo Fox knows that I have a strong interest in any movie shot in Japan. In anticipation of this release I have been working my way through the previous films to get me ready for ‘The Wolverine‘ which I will watch and later review on this site in the Films ‘Set’ In Japan section; the first time I will have critiqued a film of such sort on its release.

If it wasn’t for the fact that I have a set of Spider-Man Top Trump cards (below), which I often use in lessons to help teach comparatives and superlatives, I wouldn’t have had any idea who the likes of Professor Xavier, Magneto, Storm or Iceman were!

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I can only assume that the shot (above) was taken either from a crane, helicopter or The Front Tower Shiba Koen although when I went up to the top on the 24th floor (and subsequently the 22nd, 21st, 20th, 19th, 18th….) I couldn’t get the view I wanted. For the record there is nothing on the 23rd floor and the views on each floor were all looking in the wrong direction with offices taking up space on the side I needed.

It’s also been rumoured that Nakagin Capsule Tower (below) at 8-6-10 Ginza can be seen at some point during the film which is a fine example of Tokyo modern architecture and was one of my favourite buildings in this article from last July.

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For your information, further filming took place at the start of September 2012 outside Fukuyama Station in Hiroshima-ken and in Tomonoura, a port in the Ichichi ward of Fukuyama but sadly I didn’t know about that when I was in Hiroshima earlier this month. If I did I could at least have got a shot of the station in anticipation that a similar one would be seen in ‘The Wolverine‘!

Parramatta in Sydney doubled up as a Japanese city and Sydney Olympic Park was made into a Japanese village draped in snow. Filming also took place on Brisbane Street in Surrey Hills which was transformed to look like a Japanese street with Japanese signs and vehicles scattered throughout…according to Wikipedia, so it must be true!

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This isn’t the first time though that Zojoji Temple has featured in a movie for who can forget its appearance in the Steven Seagal classic ‘Into The Sun‘ (2005) where the main hall could be seen on 66 mins in the foreground of Tokyo Tower (above) whilst there was some meeting between the baddies though god knows why they chose to meet at such a public place! My not-so-perfect match-up of that film is also above.

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As for the temple itself, it is worth a visit in its own right and is included in the ‘Fodor’s Tokyo Top 25 Sights‘ guidebook and was therefore visited by me a few years ago when I cycled all 25 sights in one day. I have visited it half a dozen times now and definitely rate it as one of the best in Tokyo and along with Shiba Koen Park next door and Tokyo Tower nearby it all makes for a nice day trip within Tokyo. The two-storied sanmon was originally built in 1605 and is a rare example of early Edo-period architecture in Tokyo. After entering the complex through the sanmon (above) you soon come across a statue,  the stone image of buddha’s foot, a purification trough and the Great Bell of 1673 (3m high) which can all be seen in the four images below.

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I guess this temple is most famous for its rows and rows of little statues of jizobosatsu (the protector of the souls of stillborn children) which are decorated with baby clothes, toys and little windmills. Dressed mostly in red baby bonnets the statues are colourful and sad at the same time.

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The building (below) standing in the background of the folded paper prayers and next to the Main Hall (seen from a different angle) is Ankokuden which houses the Black image of Amida Buddha and is used as a prayer hall as it is widely revered as a place that brings victory and wards off evil spirits.

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The two pictures above show the Mausoleum of the Tokugawa Shoguns, which is not normally open to the public apart from on certain days each year. The other picture is of the statues that stand in front of its gate.

The Wolverine‘ is released in the UK, the USA and most of the world on July 26th. It comes out in Japan on September 13th!
Posted in Japan Filming Locations, Movie Locations | Tagged , , , , , , | 16 Comments