Monday, 5 November 2012

Japanese Prison Bar

Well it took a long time, but finally I'm in a position where my brain works well enough to actually write something.  Since this state was caused by a large amount of drinking, before I go back to video games, I'll give a run down of one of the most interesting bars I've ever been to.

The bar is called Kangoku and is situated about 15 minutes from my apartment.  From the outside, the place is ominous as fuck because all the windows are blacked out and aside from the neon sign, the whole thing is pretty featureless. 

So the first thing you are treated to as you walk through the door is a skull right in your face
At this point you already kind of know what you're in for, so you navigate a dark corridor filled with other scary things and then you come to a recreation of a prison cell block where you are greeted by a waiter. 

With this being a prison themed bar, all the tables are inside cells that you are put into by the waiter.  Some of the cells are closed and your orders are delivered through a hole in the door, our cell was not closed and the waiter would just take and bring orders normally, probably due to the size of our group.

The food here was really good, and all for a good price too!  We got a course that involved a load of shashimi, soup, potato wedges and some of the must succulent chicken ever as well as some sushi to top it all off.  As well as that, for about 1000 yen, we got an all you can drink deal, so for about 90 minutes we had a never ending supply of booze.

Prison food has never been so good
I'm not sure what time it was exactly,  but at what I think was around 8pm, everything goes dark and a sort of show type thing starts.  This involves some spooky story being told over a loudspeaker, but the loudspeaker was a load of crap so it was basically incomprehensible.  Once the announcer is done, the whole place goes pitch black, and a couple of guys in a scary glow in the dark mask starts terrorising the customers.  It's actually really cool to see, and the way the guy in the mask moves is really impressive.

Once the show is done, they do special stuff for anyone in the establishment with a birthday, and then you're free to move on.  It's a great place with good food, good prices and good service, with an entertaining theme and an impressive little show, so check that shit out if you find yourself in Nagoya

Extra pics!




1 comment:

  1. Saw Justin Lee Collins visit a prison bar in Tokyo on his Turning Japanese programme. Any old people in there or is it too scary for us?

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