
Overview
The Japanese Derby is an annual race that draws over 100,000 spectators. Many fans start lining up near the entrances to Tokyo Racecourse several days – the first ones more than a week – before the race, which lasts just two and a half minutes. Among those lining up are a man for whom the racetrack brings back happy memories of his late wife, and a man who recently quit his job due to office politics. As the clock ticks down to the race, a special sense of unity develops among those waiting in line. What do they think about, and how do they spend their time, during the tremendously long wait?
-
6 - 1Mountain Restaurant: Creating and Reliving Memories January 16, 2018
-
6 - 2Life Without a Smartphone February 06, 2018
-
6 - 3Born to be Wild: Motorcyclists' Road to Happiness February 20, 2018
-
6 - 4When a Man Shines His Shoes March 13, 2018
-
6 - 5Printing Shop: Lives in Print April 10, 2018
-
6 - 6Bento Tales from a Northern Fishing Town April 24, 2018
-
6 - 7Christmas at a 24-Hour Bakery May 08, 2018
-
6 - 8Heading Home on the Strait Ferry May 29, 2018
-
6 - 9A Park Where Dreams Take Wing June 26, 2018
-
6 - 10Lives Along Route 45 July 10, 2018
-
6 - 11The Traveling Library Truck July 24, 2018
-
6 - 12A Spring Miracle: The Firefly Squid of Toyama August 07, 2018
-
6 - 13The Women on the Cosmetics Floor August 21, 2018
-
6 - 14The Race Before the Japanese Derby September 18, 2018
-
6 - 15The Great Hospital Move October 09, 2018
-
6 - 16Relaxing in a Nagoya Café October 23, 2018
-
6 - 17Hooked on Fishing in Tokyo Bay October 30, 2018
-
6 - 18The Sight Beyond the Undersea Tunnel November 20, 2018
-
6 - 19Surviving the Summer with Fresh Juice December 04, 2018
-
6 - 20From the Remittance Office with Love December 18, 2018