Here's some of what David enjoyed in 2008:
Best Movie of 2008: To say that Hirokazu Koreeda's Aruite mo Aruite mo is the best Japanese film of the year, or even the best film of the year, is to say too little. This is, in fact, one of the best films I have ever seen. It is one of the few movies that can sit on the same shelf as Ozu's Tokyo Monogatari. It belongs with Ozu's masterpiece not only on account of its quality, but also because, in its plotlessness and its humanity it will sneak up on viewers to provide a tremendously moving, a tremendously satisfying, experience. I am told that Koreeda was unable to find a distributor for his finest film in the country that elected George W. Bush twice, a country that, unsurprisingly, prefers its movies to feature not human beings, but explosions, superheroes, and submarines. A version subtitled in English, however, does exist. I stumbled across it on a transpacific flight.
Best Novel of 2008: As I wrote elsewhere, Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter is so much a part of the American DNA that I was under the impression that I had read it. I hadn't, and am now tremendously glad that an odd series of circumstances lead me to pick it up. There is only one other novel, Huckleberry Finn
, which tells us so much about the America of its time, and of ours. Owing to the unfortunate final chapters Twain tacked on, it is difficult to call Twain's classic perfect. One has no hesitation in employing that adjective to describe Hawthorne's Letter.
Best Restaurant of 2008: It's actually been the best restaurant of just about every year since I discovered it, but Inaka, my local izakaya, continues, every time I am there, to delight me with Japanese food at its simple and earthy best.
Best Meal of 2008: The thing about blogging is that you tend to record the things that delight you soon after encountering them, and I've written about this meal before, too. A few months after digesting it, it remains the culinary highlight of the year. A simple steak frites served up at the Station House Cafe in Point Reyes Station, it was exquisite. The New York steak was from Niman Ranch, which, I am now certain, is producing the best beef in America, and it was perfectly prepared, seasoned only, I believe, with a little salt and pepper. I enjoyed my meat with the best beer I had this year.
Best Beer of the Year: That would be the Lagunitas Brewery's IPA. Perfectly sharp and hoppy, and perfect with a good steak (and every other meal I had in Northern California this summer). It did have some competition, both from a non-commercial, but soon to go commercial, brewer I know here in Japan, and also the always satisfying beers made by Baird Beer, available both at the original location in Numazu, and now at The Taproom in Nakameguro, Tokyo.
Fitness Fad of the Year: Who would have thought that I would come to love good old fashioned push ups? They are now a regular part of my routine, thanks to something that, like so many other good things, I stumbled across on the Internet.
Technological Innovation of the Year: It didn't actually appear in 2008, but that's the year a Suica card found its way into my wallet. Always a techno-skeptic, always a late adopter—at one point in my life I was confident I would never use email—I typically go nuts over these things once I finally get started, and now I can't imagine traveling around the Kanto area without my little green card to smooth my way.
More anon, perhaps.
—David
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