The series begins with history teacher Nima Zande-Karimi (Siamak Ansari) realizing that his extensive research on Persian and world history is of little use to financing his day-to-day life. He is about to leave Tehran for good to go back to his hometown by the name of Darab, when he comes across young university student Roya Atabaki (Sahar Jafari-Jozani) who is researching for her final year dissertation, which is regarding the period 1198–1203, that is said to be a period of turmoil for Iran's ruling elite. Such turmoil that, very few books are available on that period for Roya's research. It is then that Nima receives an anonymous telephone call, which leads him to Niavaran Palace (currently a museum), where he is told to have a coffee and wait. The coffee (which is bitter) is ready and he duly drinks it, his sight becomes hazy, and when he manages to refocus he is in the year 1201 (1822 AD), and the story develops therein.
A clever, high-concept Iranian time-travel satire with historical playfulness and a strong comic voice, but it is also very culturally specific and uneven in execution. Worth it if you enjoy political comedy, period detours, and shows that mix absurdity with history; less so if you want tight plotting or broad accessibility.
Best for
Viewers who like satirical comedy with a historical twist
Fans of time-travel stories that use the premise for social commentary
People interested in Iranian television and regional political humor
Audiences comfortable with culture-specific references and slower, dialogue-driven storytelling
Skip if
You want fast, polished genre storytelling
You prefer broadly accessible comedy without local context
You are looking for a fully cohesive, high-budget period drama
You dislike shows that lean more on concept and tone than narrative precision
Overview
Bitter Coffee is an unusual and appealing hybrid: part sitcom, part historical fantasy, part political satire. The premise is strong enough to carry a lot of goodwill, and the series gets mileage out of dropping a modern academic into a turbulent early-19th-century Iran, where bureaucracy, power, and social manners become ripe for comedy.
Worth noting
Its biggest strength is the voice of the show. Mehran Modiri’s sensibility gives it a playful, sometimes pointed edge, and the series has the kind of premise that invites both broad jokes and sharper cultural commentary. The historical setting also gives it a distinctive identity compared with more conventional time-travel comedies.
Bottom line
That said, it is not a universally easy watch. The humor and references are deeply rooted in Iranian context, and the storytelling can feel more episodic and concept-driven than tightly plotted. If the premise clicks, it is memorable; if it does not, the show can feel uneven. For the right viewer, though, it is a rewarding and distinctive one-season curiosity.
2016 · Curator 9.9/10 (282.6K ratings) · Where to watch: Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads
For its prestige-period approach to power, institutions, and the private cost of public life, even though it is much more restrained in tone.
Topics
time travel, historical comedy, satire, period piece, political humor, culture clash, dramedy, Middle Eastern television, academic protagonist, early 19th century