Working in a Hidden Away Restaurant in Rome

Been a while since we did a double bill

Part of the fortune of covering a series done by the same author is that I don’t have to thumb through another file to look for another series. Last time I did this was when I was covering the two GTAs that seemed to get ignored by modern Rockstar Games: Liberty City Stories and Vice City Stories. These double bills are rare sadly, but this time around I’ve got another series by Natsume Ono: Ristorante Paradiso.

Definitely not the first time a mangaka took their audience to Italy for a story, but instead of chasing an enigmatic mob boss with dissociative identity disorder, this Seinen series is largely crime free. Drama on the other hand goes hand in hand with the panna cotta and insalata mista. Similar to the other series, House of Five Leaves, Ristorante Paradiso also features a diverse cast of characters in background and thought. The story follows a young culinary school graduate, Nicoletta, who started her journey tracking down her estranged mother for the purpose of sabotaging her livelihood after discovering she operates a restaurant in a small corner in Rome. The reason for this vendetta stems from her mother, Olga, leaving Nicoletta with Nicoletta’s grandparents while she went off to get remarried. I can see a number of ways to handle this immaturely, but from what I’ve seen, Ono handles it better than some of the other works where a connecting element is a character’s issues with an absentee parent or abandonment, then again some of those other works portray it as a balding punchline. That, or they try to take it seriously but it falls flat on its face.

Doesn’t exactly mean Nicoletta’s forgiven her mother for that, only that her priorities are elsewhere for the time being. As for the other characters, there’s one older man named Claudio who is legally separated from his wife, so he’s free to date whomever he pleases, but keeps the ring on to dissuade any women from pursuing him, though Nicoletta developed a crush on him after working with him.

Speaking of men who just want to live their lives drama free, another one of the older characters is Luciano. He keeps to himself and also turns down most women’s advances to remain loyal to his departed wife. The anime presents him as cold and stonelike, but he secretly cares a lot about his daughter and grandson. Vito is a flirty type though his heart belongs to a college student he met while working out. And there’re several other characters working at the restaurant, all with different backgrounds and connections to one another.

The series is more about the people working and dining at the restaurant than the meals so don’t expect anything of the likes of, say, Shokugeki no Soma or Dagashi Kashi where the focus is on the eats. Rather, it’s related to a joke within the Golden Kamuy community about the series being an Ainu cooking show that just so happens to feature gold treasure and a rogue unit of IJA soldiers. The restaurant ties everyone together in a way.

What I have to praise about Natsume Ono is that she creates her characters from nearly every angle. Of all the aspects that aren’t given a lot of mind, she chisels out the finest details from those characters and puts them at the forefront of her writing. I also like how she includes minor details. In Ristorante Paradiso, what is addressed is that a lot of the male staff is wearing glasses and this is by design. Nicoletta’s mother, Olga, has a thing for men in thin frames and thus makes it a part of the dress code. And you don’t need a real prescription for glasses. I forget who, but one of the characters got around this by wearing glasses without any lenses in them.

It’s a short series that has the skeleton of an anthology but isn’t as rigid as one. Ono seems to do quite a lot with very little, and as I’d found out for the research of this post, that’s not a hyperbolic statement considering Ristorante Paradiso lasts only one volume despite running for a year. House of Five Leaves, however, ran for eight volumes over the course of five years. It’s also worth noting that Ono writes BL manga under the pen name of basso, so this may have to do more with these stories being very short as opposed to a writing philosophy. Juggling multiple works at a time can get to be a hassle, but this is me thinking, so don’t quote me on anything.

Funnily enough, there is a playlist of the Ristorante Paradiso episodes, but the one I found has a few missing episodes, so if you can stand to do so, a Crunchyroll subscription should do it or if for whatever reason (I won’t judge) you don’t want them to have access to your credit card information then put on a straw hat and challenge the world government from the seven seas.

For May 25, 2024, I introduce you to Kaho Shibuya.

https://www.kaho-shibuya.com

This is a bit unorthodox for a recommendation. Google lied to me about her having a YouTube channel all her own; the closest she is to being on YouTube is multiple collaborations with the Trash Taste podcast, either individually with the hosts or on select episodes as a guest, or in interviews about her previous life, but fortunately Ms. Shibuya does have her own website as you can see linked above.

Kaho Shibuya left the life of an adult video actress (read: Japanese porn star) behind her to pursue something closer to her heart. These days, Ms. Shibuya has begun streaming on Twitch, she cosplays as different characters from anime and video games, she’s dabbled a few times in voice acting, and she even has a book on what she’s witnessed of the Japanese porn industry. These days, people discover her from her cosplays or collabs than of her previous work. If all that sounds like it’s up your alley, click the link above and see what’s in store.

A Lookback at House of Five Leaves

Filling in some time during the pandemic

The accursed year of 2020 was a lot of things to people and only a few of those things were good. I recall searching for something to occupy my time while trapped in the dungeon and going back to that Looper article, I thought about looking for a review for a certain anime I’d definitely not heard of prior to reading it: House of Five Leaves, known in Japanese as Sarai-ya Goyou. Created by Natsume Ono.

Set during the Edo period, it’s about a samurai warrior named Akitsu Masanosuke who very much has the skills of a seasoned warrior, but his timid demeanor loses him a client. The perfect samurai is meant to be intimidating, tough, and unflinching and this guy is shy, unassuming, and nervous. Sort of like Season 1 Mob.

Masanosuke doesn’t really meet the expectations or idea of a warrior even for the time period, which is the point of the series. It takes all the tropes associated with most samurai media and flips them on their head while also grounding the Edo period into reality. One could reasonably put two and two together based on what they know about the Tokugawa period and the Sakoku policy that a class of people defined by war in a time where there aren’t any wars anymore makes for a band of money-hungry and utterly reckless scoundrels… for the most part.

In reality, most samurai were just as diabolically malicious as the enemies they claimed to defeat in combat. Just like medieval knights, both of these warriors have a lot of stories real and mythical surrounding them.

This doesn’t reflect either class as a whole as lots of knights and samurai did have human decency and protect the weak as servants of the people, but being of nobility in Europe and Japan respectively, it meant that there was a lot of power shared by a diverse group of people of different thoughts and intentions. Focusing on Japan, some samurai were excellent and deserving of their position, others were fine with just the bare minimum of simply being there and the rest were heinously dangerous criminals abusing their positions for personal gain. Yeah, there’s no shortage of all three of these the world over; it’s the same old song no matter where you go. And I like that. It reminds you that there’s a difference between being something and being able to do something on a moral level.

So House of Five Leaves is generally about a nervous man who’s too gentle to throw the first punch, or in this case, swing the blade first. Plot wise, he finds himself in with the wrong crowd. Part of the downside of being gentle is not having the spine to put your foot down, which is how Masanosuke finds himself embedded with a group of criminals, functionally early inductees of what we now know as the Yakuza.

It’s hard to say when and how the Yakuza started, but based on my description of the Edo period making for restless ronin eager for battle some theories suggest that this is the most likely case for how the Yakuza morphed over centuries to become recognized as an organized crime group in Japan. For Masanosuke, these criminals specialize in theft and call themselves the Five Leaves. Their enigmatic leader, Yaichi, offers him the position of bodyguard which he reluctantly agrees to.

Again, he has the skills of a samurai, but doesn’t have the intimidation reflective of most other warriors in the Edo period. A worse person would jump at the offer and use whatever excuse there is to cut anyone in two. That said, there’s more to the series than just Masanosuke’s navigating this group of thieves and savages he just said yes to out of desperation.

Yaichi is one of the more interesting characters in the story. He keeps his personal history very close to his chest, playing things off as though he’s simply living life to the fullest. Other members of his gang or known associates who have some kind of connection to him or the gang share their own stories. An ex-thief named Matsukichi works as a beauty ornament manufacturer by day and a spymaster by night, contributing to the beauty of the women while also listening in on the Five Leaves’ potential targets. A tavern owner named Umezo who walked in the same sandals as the others but requested retirement from that lifestyle for safety’s sake, which was granted surprisingly enough. If you know a thing or two about organized crime groups, cults, secret societies, etc., they rarely let you go without a type of debt to pay…

…but in this case (slight spoiler), the loss of his skills weren’t gonna change how the gang operated. He also had a young family to put ahead of himself. Finally, there’s a geisha named Otake who was made to work off a large debt by way of entertainment (as was the standard practice/purpose of a geisha at the time) until Yaichi intervened financially.

Only a 1-cour anime series, it takes you into their eyes and what they go up against. The struggles, the nuances, the desires expressed; this was the anime that inspired my first accursed blog back in 2021… before it cha-cha slid off a cliff. I don’t want to link to that blog anymore; I’m trying to put it behind me, but it keeps coming back and I don’t even think it was a good showcase of my writing. But at least it inspired me to start this one which I’m more proud of.

Back to Five Leaf Clover Gang: my search for a review and recommendation on YouTube led to a playlist with all the episodes on it. People are really getting around YouTube’s copyright strike hammer to get some classics onto the platform like Azumanga Daioh and Lucky☆Star. There exists one spoiler free review on YouTube from over nine years ago following the trends that I’ve been going with so far with anime, awesome reception s[DIO wrryyyy]t sales.

Channel: AnimeEveryday

Keep in mind that this isn’t an action-heavy series, at least the anime isn’t. Don’t go in expecting Masanosuke to swing a sword all the time, because he’s not that kind of guy. He wasn’t written to be that kind of guy and I think it’s an advantage the series has over its contemporaries and progenitors. I like to think of it as the kind of anime that explores the issues people face daily, even if it’s set in the Edo period and if you choose to give it a watch as well, you think so too. The link is up above. Happy watching!