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Jiro Dreams Of SushiSukiyabashi JiroSushi AsianJapanese DreamJapanese FoodExotic FoodFood Food FoodFood PornFattiest CutForwardO Toro in Jiro Dreams of SushiChef TastiqueThe ChefMerry RestaurantsSeat SushiKoderchrome S FoodFood Glorious FoodWonderful SushiGreatest SushiSushi EatingForwardWhat a movie! What a way of Kyukyoku! Jiro Dreams of Sushi is a documentary on the world's best sushi chef, the chef at the Michelin 3-star Jiro, a 10-seat sushi restaurant by the Tokyo subway. A must-see movie of the greatness of a man's stoic pursuit of delicious food.Is he LA's most fun-loving sushi expert?In the Season 2 premiere of Documentary Now!, comedians Bill Hader and Fred Armisen twisted political campaign docudrama of The War Room into a satirical version titled, “The Bunker.” With politics out of the way, they got a little more contemporary with their skewering, this time with rice and chicken.“Juan Likes Rice and Chicken” is the IFC mockumentary series’ ingenious send-up of a recent spate of foodie docs such as Jiro Dreams of Sushi that chronicle the unhealthy level of perfectionism sought out by master chefs.

Jiro, directed by documentarian and Chef’s Table creator David Gelb, chronicles the story of the titular sushi master who must contemplate retiring and leaving his legendary restaurant to a son that may not have proper fish-rolling skills; the acclaimed film provides a loose template for Juan to stretch to its most absurd ends.The episode, perhaps the best all-around story of the series so far, swaps a sushi restaurant in a Japanese subway station to a chicken shack in the remote mountains outside Bogota, Colombia. It’s owned by the titular Juan, and like Jiro, Juan only serves a limited menu: he literally catches chicken outside a coop, and if he doesn’t catch the chicken there isn’t chicken on the menu that day. He is also dealing with questions about his future, and must contend with his son Arturo (Armisen, performing entirely in Spanish), who will take over the restaurant after his older brother abandoned them both to open his own buffet restaurant.From its hilarious look at the way food documentaries are replete with heaping spoonfuls of the most scrumptious food porn you’ve ever seen to the way it lampoons snobby food culture, the episode continues Documentary Now!’

s pitch-perfect, humorous homage to some of the most celebrated documentaries in cinema history.
sushi grade tuna columbus ohioIn the second part of an interview with Rhys Thomas and Alex Buono, Inverse found out how the pair went about capturing the look of modern films and when documentarians become self aware.
sushi aachen online bestellenWhat kind of details did you look for in a contemporary documentary like Jiro Dreams of Sushi for “Juan Likes Rice & Chicken”?
jiro dreams of sushi dutch subtitlesAlex Buono: That’s less about trying to emulate production design and more trying to emulate a filmmaking style.
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If you look at Jiro and Chef’s Table, which are both made by filmmaker David Gelb, he’s created the style for this sort of food porn type show.
sushi tei jakarta kota kasablankaIt was rich colors, slow motion texture, detailed shots of hands making food, and beauty shots of the food.
sushi las condes manquehueRhys Thomas: The visual language of the camerawork is something we try to pay attention to as well.
youda sushi chef 2 free downloadWhen would they zoom? How fast are the zooms? Sometimes, like in The War Room and The Bunker, it comes down to the time period and what they were using, but there were a lot of little signifiers that helped you be accurate.Was Juan Likes Rice and Chicken easier to do because it’s based on something that’s contemporary?

AB: You watch these things enough times and you recognize a pattern and realize what they’re doing. At a certain point, you realize the pattern works and you lock in on it, and it’s the same thing from when Rhys and I worked at Saturday Night Live for ten years. We’ve trained ourselves to identify patterns very quickly and grab on to them. We intuitively know what we can control and what we can’t.When we were trying to figure out how they did that with what lenses we were literally able to reach out and get specifics about that actual look from Gelb.Have you gotten any feedback from any of the documentarians you’ve parodied, like Gelb or Errol Morris or people from Vice?RT: We definitely felt a little nervous taking on landmark documentaries by documentarians who work very hard and tirelessly for little reward. There was part of me that always felt guilty that we were using their work as a shorthand for comedy. But some people from Vice came to our premiere last year and enjoyed being targets.

D. A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus who made The War Room came to this season’s premiere and watched “The Bunker” with us. It was terrifying, but they said they enjoyed it and laughed at all the tiny details.AB: For instance, we noticed James Carville would just sort of pick things up and wear them for awhile and we had Teddy Redbones, Bill’s character, do the same. We had no idea what that was about, but we watched the episode with Pennebaker and Hegedus and they told us Carville was so superstitious that he wouldn’t change his underwear or take off that big jean jacket.RT: As documentary fans ourselves, getting that insight was such a thrill.This interview has been edited for brevity and clarityPhotos via Getty Images / Frederick M. Brown, IFCSummer TV: what a wasteland. Just as the long, cosy nights of autumn and winter are the seasonal home for flagship dramas such as Downton Abbey and Line of Duty, so our summers are plagued with televisual mishaps and tired repeats. Glance at this week’s schedules and you’ll see what I mean.

The Great British Bake Off notwithstanding, this is arguably the worst seven days of television in living memory. On Friday, for instance, the only new programme of note is Mountain Goats, a BBC comedy so broad and derivative it makes Mrs Brown’s Boys seem like The Trip. But that is nothing compared to tonight’s “highlights” – a dire procession of game-show banality (Keep it in the Family, The Cube), pedestrian drama (Casualty) and humdrum repeats (Walking Through History). Thankfully, this no longer matters. On demand TV services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime have given frustrated viewers an escape route. Now you can flee scheduled television in the dog days of summer and take your pick of the best programmes of the last 40 years. The only difficulty is the dizzying choice, which is why we’ve picked out 25 of the best shows available on demand to get you through to September. 1. The Thin Blue Line (Netflix) Errol Morris’s dramatic true-crime reconstruction about a 1976 miscarriage of justice in Texas changed not only the verdict of the case, but also how many documentaries are filmed.

It’s weird, stylised and provocative. 2. Jiro Dreams of Sushi (Netflix) Part paean to the Japanese dish, part meditation on the pursuit of perfection, this exquisite film tells the story of 86-year-old Jiro Ono, owner of a 10-seater sushi bar in the basement of a Tokyo office block, and one of the most famous chefs in East Asia. Jiro Dreams of Sushi, Netflix 3. David Attenbrough – the Early Years (BBC iPlayer) Delve into the BBC’s archives to watch a fresh-faced David Attenborough in the fascinating Fifties series Zoo Quest. His trip to Kenya to meet Elsa the lioness, shortly before her death, will melt the flintiest of hearts. Watch David Attenbrough – the Early Years on BBC Four collections 4. Dark Days (Netflix) A stark, black-and-white portrait of a homeless community living in disused underground tunnels in New York, Marc Singer’s film is a poignant, powerful and haunting account. 5. Paris Is Burning (YouTube) Jennie Livingstone’s tribute to the Harlem Drag Ball scene of the 1980s offers a rich and insightful slice of a heady world of high camp and even higher heels.

Watch Paris is Burning on YouTube Drama 1. Breaking Bad (Netflix) Vince Gilligan’s bleak, unpredictable drama about a chemistry teacher turned crystal meth dealer is an award-winning masterpiece. Its spin-off, Better Call Saul, is pretty good too. 2. Orange Is the New Black (Netflix) Jenji Kohan’s tightly written drama makes US prison life feel remarkably real, thanks to its exceptional, predominantly female cast. Taylor Schilling plays Piper Chapman, and captures her transformation from naive inmate to stoic ringleader perfectly. 3. House of Cards (Netflix) The first original Netflix series, this is a polished Washington-set update of the Nineties BBC drama about a Machiavellian politician in pursuit of power. Kevin Spacey’s dastardly Frank Underwood is the highlight. 4. Freaks and Geeks (Amazon Prime) Director Judd Apatow (also of Bridesmaids and Trainwreck) was the executive producer of this cult comedy drama about a gaggle of misfits at an 80s US high school. It also helped launch the careers of Seth Rogen, James Franco and Jason Segel.

5. Bloodline (Netflix) This tense, tortuous tale of a well-to-do Florida family slowly imploding is conventionally told but searing performances from Ben Mendelsohn, Sissy Spacek and Kyle Chandler make it increasingly addictive to watch. Arrested Development (Netflix) Arrested Development is one of the finest sitcoms ever made, laced with intricate, quick-fire jokes; it’s an ingenious, cartoonish snapshot of a spectacularly dysfunctional Californian family. 2. Archer (Netflix) A cross between a workplace comedy and a 007 spoof, this sardonic animation follows the narcissistic, womanising secret agent Sterling Archer as he fights off (and insults) terrorists in increasingly inventive ways. 3. Community (Netflix & Yahoo) This ensemble US sitcom about an unlikely set of classmates at a Colorado community college has never quite taken off in the UK. More fool us because it’s sharp and clever, with a cracking, self-deprecating turn from Chevy Chase. 4. It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (Netflix) Child molestation, abortion, racism, homophobia: no topic is taboo in this hilarious and subversive US comedy about four morally reprehensible friends who run a dingy pub in Philadelphia.

Danny DeVito stars in season two. 5. Transparent (Amazon Prime) The Golden Globe-winning series stars Jeffrey Tambor as a divorced LA father who decides to tell his self-obsessed grown-up children that he wants to come out as being transgender. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (YouTube) This adaptation of John le Carré’s masterpiece was filmed at the height of the Cold War and thrums with a very English sort of paranoia. Alec Guinness is superb as seemingly diffident masterspy George Smiley. Watch Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy on YouTube 2. I, Claudius (YouTube) This faux-autobiographical retrospective of the life of the Roman Emperor Claudius is one of the best TV dramas of the 20th century, influencing everything from Game of Thrones to The Sopranos. Watch I, Claudius on YouTube 3. Spaced (Channel 4oD) Flouting every sitcom convention, the very funny Spaced marked the arrival of Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost as a creative force, with its knowing humour, obscure pop culture references and zany gags.

4. Pride and Prejudice (Netflix) Colin Firth’s dashing Mr Darcy emerging from a lake in a dripping wet shirt must surely have helped this lavish and witty adaptation of Jane Austen’s novel win a place in the pantheon of great BBC costume dramas. 5. House of Cards (BBC/Netflix) The original House of Cards, about conniving British MP Francis Urquhart, is even more cynical than Netflix’s update, and funnier too, with Ian Richardson deliciously dark in the lead role. The next big thing? 1. Jeremy Clarkson’s new project (Amazon Prime) The former Top Gear triumvirate of Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond will reunite next year for a new 12-episode series, exclusive to Amazon. They’ve been given free rein to do what they want to do – and probably a lot more money. 2. Narcos (Netflix) Netflix’s thrilling 10-part drama sets the rise of Pablo Escobar from small-time Colombian hood to the world’s most powerful cocaine trafficker against the covert American attempts to stop him.