Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou: Quiet Country Cafe

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Alternative Titles

Synonyms: YKK: Quiet Country Cafe, Yokohama Shopping Journal: Quiet Country Cafe
Japanese: ヨコハマ買い出し紀行 Quiet Country Cafe


Information

Type: OVA
Episodes: 2
Status: Finished Airing
Aired: Dec 18, 2002 to Mar 5, 2003
Producers: SME Visual Works
Licensors: None found, add some
Studios: Ajia-do
Source: Manga
Genres: Sci-FiSci-Fi, Slice of LifeSlice of Life
Theme: IyashikeiIyashikei
Demographic: SeinenSeinen
Duration: 32 min. per ep.
Rating: R+ - Mild Nudity

Statistics

Score: 7.161 (scored by 92529,252 users)
1 indicates a weighted score.
Ranked: #35462
2 based on the top anime page. Please note that 'Not yet aired' and 'R18+' titles are excluded.
Popularity: #4793
Members: 20,774
Favorites: 57

Resources

Filtered Results: 8 / 9
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Preliminary Spoiler
Aug 14, 2016
Mixed Feelings
Skip these, definitely watch the first OVA set.

The second set of YKK OVAs is significantly not as good as the first. Main reason: the dystopian elements of the world were absent. Here's this beautiful, water-covered world, and they mostly only show parts that may as well be current-day Japan. The art is just bog-standard and sub-par. There's nothing you haven't seen 100 times before and drawn better elsewhere.

Also, there's the lingering ass shots. They even introduce Misago in the second half of the second of two OVAs, just so the show can have some boobs. She has no lines, interacts with no-one, and the only ...
Oct 22, 2008
Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou: Quiet Country Cafe (or just Quiet Country Cafe) is a sequel to Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou and an OVA adaptation of the manga of the same name. Having been made four years later, in 2002, and by a different studio (SME Animation Works, which would later become Aniplex), there are quite a few noticeable differences between the two OVAs as well as from the original manga source material.

Story: 9 (Great)

The story doesn't necessarily pick up from the previous OVA, and can stand alone on its own without having watched the other OVA before hand.

Alpha Hatusueno is a very human-like robot in the form ...
Jul 17, 2007
Compared to the OVA prequel this OVA has more to give the viewer. Absolutely stunning environments and great character movements almost brings it alive in front of me, and somehow I wish that I was able to jump into the screen and just be lying there on the grassfield and watch up on the blue sky, counting the white clouds that move by.
Just like the prequel, this is just the right anime to watch when you want to relax and get the pulse down. Accompanied with a hot cup of coffée you are definitely on the right track!
May 25, 2008
I wasn't quite sure what to expect from this after watching the first one. The animation in this outdid the other. The backgrounds were absolutely gorgeous; the swaying of grass, the smooth water, trickling waterfalls were all animated beautifully. The characters were nicely rendered as well.

Like the OVA prior, it is again completely relaxing and pleasing to the eye. Nothing much happens as well, except for through the everyday life of Alpha a typhoon hits and she decided to move out of the comfort of her abode and explores more of the world. Now after watching this I want to go read some more of ...
Jul 2, 2018
One of the things that makes Yokohama Kaidashi Kikou a beautiful piece of work is how Hitoshi Ashinano meticulously draws the minimalistic lines that visualize a post-apocalyptic world slowly coming to a silent state of peace. Despite how effortless it may look with the natural flow of curvy lines his pen traces, you could very well see the thought put into every bit of detail within a single panel or illustration. The second OVA, Quiet Country Cafe, may not have consideration of how important these factors are into exhibiting the transient effect of the manga, and the end result is something that falls below average ...
May 30, 2020
Mixed Feelings
Don't get me wrong, I love YKK. I've read the manga, and I'd give it a 10 any day (this may be a sort of bias). I also liked the first set of OVAs, but haven't watched recently enough to say much about them. I immediately noticed that the animation in this set seemed more crisp, and was optimistic. I didn't remember the specific sequence of alpha and kokone riding their bikes from the manga, and was put off when kokone grabbed alphas boob(?).
The pacing was ridiculously slow. The still shots and pans of nature, while pretty, made me feel like I was watching ...
Feb 8, 2019
(Review originally from Letterboxd)

From the director of the criminally underrated coming-of-age nostalgia piece Ocean Waves comes a full-on animated tone poem about a young woman living a quiet life in a quasi-post-apocalypse.

To say that Quiet Country Cafe is understated would be itself an understatement. The dialogue is sparse, the story can be summarized in two sentences, and the worldbuilding is so vague that the sci-fi elements could be completely missed if not for one specific scene. It's all about the mood, and it works marvelously at evoking that tranquil feeling, warm yet tinged with an inner core of sadness.

Exploring the world, hearing the wonderful soundtrack ...
Jul 9, 2020
Quick take: Purely slice-of-life, the second set of OVAs continue to explore the concept of learning to find the beauty in everything around you and learning to understand what it means to live.

Whereas I felt sad most of the time in the first set of OVAs, I felt much more “at peace” and optimistic about YKK:QCC. We see that Alpha has moved on in search of experiences and her personality and emotions grow. It seems that in order to make this move and discover life, she needed a push. Through this transformation and symbolic destruction of her previous life, we experience new emotions with her; ...