Los Angeles Times

Three tales with deep memories

- — Robert Abele

Featuring three stories set in three separate Chinese cities, the anime “Flavors of Youth,” produced by the Japanese studio behind “Your Name,” is a sensitivel­y handled triptych exploring the bitterswee­t understand­ing adulthood necessitat­es when confrontin­g the fragility of childhood affections.

“The Rice Noodles,” directed by Yi Xiaoxing, is narrated by a melancholi­c young Beijing man recalling the way his most cherished emotions — love for his grandma, a romantic crush, compassion for a struggling family — were always attached to the pleasure of slurping bowls of San Xian noodles. It’s like a finely wrought essay designed to elicit a tear and a satisfying hunger.

In “A Little Fashion Show,” from Japanese animator Yoshitaka Takeuch, a bond between sisters who lost their parents is tested when one grows up to become a high-end fashion model, and soon learns the impermanen­ce of the job, and the limits in attaching worth to beauty.

And Li Haoling’s “Love in Shanghai,” the most schematic of the three but no less evocative of the past’s hold on the present, sees an ambitious architectu­re student realizing the mistake he made as a prideful boy afraid of letting the girl in his clique of pals know how he felt.

Though made by different directors, there’s a visual language of urban detail, intimate gesture and expressive­ly animated lighting that connects all three — they’re like sweet, sad pop songs from a supergroup with many lead performers.

“Flavors of Youth.” In Japanese with English subtitles. Running time: 1 hour, 13 minutes. Playing: Streaming on Netflix.

 ?? Netf lix ?? PAN (at left, voiced by Takayuki Nakatsukas­a) and Xiaoyu (Ikumi Hasegawa) from “Flavors of Youth.”
Netf lix PAN (at left, voiced by Takayuki Nakatsukas­a) and Xiaoyu (Ikumi Hasegawa) from “Flavors of Youth.”

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