Food, glorious food, has long been an overarching theme or key prop in movies, sometimes with mouth-watering effect, at other times about as appetising as a dish of cold porridge.
Some will have made you ravenously hungry while others may have put you off your tucker or left you craving for something far more substantial.
With Le Chef, a French confection starring Jean Reno and Michaël Youn, recently releases into Australian cinemas, let’s reflect on the most memorable foodie movies of the past few decades as well as those that, for various reasons, were less tasty or digestible.
Among the off-cuts that don’t make our list but are worth mentioning are My Dinner with Andre (1981), Tampopo (1985), Jamón, jamón (1992), Eat Drink Man Woman (1994) and Woman on Top (2000).
The Gourmet Dishes
Babette’s Feast (1987)
This foreign-language Oscar winner is a gastronomic delight, a beautifully photographed, sublimely-acted, whimsical tale set in Denmark's remote Jutland coast in the 19th century. Elegant Parisian Babette (Stéphane Audran) is hired as a maid-cook by two spinsters. On the 100th anniversary of their father’s birth, the saintly sisters decide to stage a modest celebration but when Babette wins 10,000 francs in a lottery she persuades them to let her prepare a grand feast. Yum!
Ratatouille (2007)
Remy, the rat with a taste for fine food, is the unlikely star of this wonderful animation creation from Pixar. Food never looked more tempting in this charming, witty tale of the rodent who infiltrates the kitchen of a restaurant owned by the famous chef Gusteau. After Gusteau dies, Remy teams up with lowly kitchen hand Linguini to whip up cordon bleu dishes. The result is a feast for the senses as well as food for thought.
Big Night (1996)
Stanley Tucci and Tony Shalhoub play bickering Brooklyn brothers who hatch a plan to save their floundering restaurant in this smart dramedy co-written and co-directed by the talented Tucci. Their scheme involves preparing a magnificent feast for famous Italian-American singer Louis Prima that will surely put their eatery on the map.
Chocolat (2000)
Juliette Binoche is terrific as a footloose woman who together with her young daughter opens a chocolate shop in a conservative 1960 French town, in Lasse Hallström's whimsical tale. The townsfolk are won over by her exquisite chocolate, except for the mayor who organises a boycott of her decadent, immoral treats. Johnny Depp adds to the fun as an Irish gypsy.
Like Water for Chocolate (1992)
Set in turn-of-the-century Mexico, Alfonso Arau’s movie is an erotic and humorous tale of a woman who is passionately in love but not allowed to marry because, as the youngest of three daughters, tradition demands that she takes care of her mother until she dies. Her swain marries her sister but she continues a sensual relationship with him via the delicious food she cooks.
Mostly Martha (2001)
This beguiling German comedy/drama about a lonely but gorgeous chef who finds love with an Italian sous chef while struggling to cope with her young niece inspired the Hollywood remake No Reservations (see below). Martina Gedeck plays Martha, who’s rated by her demanding boss as the “second best chef” in Hamburg. After a car accident which kills her sister and injures her eight-year-old daughter, Martha reluctantly agrees to look after the traumatised girl while she searches for her long-gone Italian father. Martha initially resents the new sous chef, the playful, boisterous Mario (Sergio Castellitto) as a threat to her dominance of the kitchen.
The Trip (2010)
Two of Britain’s funniest men, Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon (pictured, top), hit the road to the north of England in Michael Winterbottom’s entertaining comedy laced with a touch of pathos. The nominal reason for the journey – Coogan being commissioned by a Sunday newspaper to review restaurants in the region – is merely a prop which enables the comedians to match wits, bicker, trade insults and tell stories. The food looks sensational, belying the old idea that Pommy food is stodgy and uninspiring.
Great Movies, but Appetite Killers
Food Inc. (2008)
Robert Kenner’s gut-wrenching expose of the US food industry is an appetite killer. The doco spotlights the handful of agribusiness giants that control what the vast majority of Americans consume every day, making you wonder if any of those unhealthy and at times lethal practices are happening Down Under. In part, it plays like a real-life horror movie with gory scenes shot in a pigs’ slaughterhouse by a hidden camera, sick cows being pushed around by a forklift, a researcher sticking his hand into a hole in a cow’s stomach, and offal being funnelled along a conveyor belt.
The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover (1989)
Food, sex, murder, torture and cannibalism are among the ingredients of Peter Greenaway’s blackly comic fable which was widely interpreted as an attack on Thatcherism. Helen Mirren plays the wife of a boorish restaurant owner/criminal (Michael Gambon) who has an affair with a gentle bookseller. Critics labelled some scenes as grotesque and disgusting and advised against seeing the film on a full stomach.
Delicatessen (1991)
Can cannibalism ever be funny? Well, yes, when the subject is treated with such flair and imagination in this surreal, darkly humorous film from French directors Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro. Set amid the post-war rubble of a deli/apartment house, it features an assortment of oddballs including a depraved, wild-eyed butcher, his shy, myopic daughter and a man who lives ankle-deep in water where he raises frogs and snails. Dominique Pinon plays a former circus clown who turns up in response to an ad for a job as a handyman, not knowing the ravenous tenants intend that he’ll be their next meal.
Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe? (1978)
Robert Morley stars as a gourmand whose doctor orders him to lose 63kg, in this deliciously black comedy directed by Ted Kotcheff. As Morley faces the prospect of a crash diet, suddenly Europe’s finest chefs start keeling over in various bizarre ways, including being crushed by a duck press, baked in an oven and drowned. Jacqueline Bisset plays a world-renowned dessert specialist and the ex-wife of fast-food entrepreneur George Segal, who’s determined to protect her.
Movies with Little After-Taste
Julie & Julia (2009)
Granted, this comedy starring Meryl Streep and Amy Adams as a famous chef/author and the blogger who idolised her delighted a lot of people. But I found it a half-baked effort that was akin to consuming a Chinese meal: Okay at the time, but soon forgotten and not terribly satisfying. The usually faultless Streep’s caricature of Julia Child, who almost singlehandedly introduced the US to the delights of French cuisine, rarely rang true, the narrative was light on laughs and there were no dramatic pay-offs.
Eat Pray Love (2010)
Right, this movie starring Julia Roberts and based on the best-selling novel by Elizabeth Gilbert had plenty of admirers, almost all female, I’d guess. To this unreconstructed male, it was a corny and overly sentimental tale of a narcissist who takes a very long time to find the right balance between body, mind and spirit. The ‘eat’ section in Italy had its appetite-whetting moments but the spiritual interlude in India and the romance in Bali were extremely trite.
No Reservations (2007)
Scott Hicks’ romantic comedy, a remake of Mostly Martha, feels under-cooked, not least due to the lack of chemistry between Catherine Zeta-Jones’ cold, lonely New York chef and Aaron Eckhart’s cocky sous-chef. Abigail Breslin has the thankless task of playing Zeta-Jones’ bratty niece for whom she becomes a reluctant guardian after Breslin’s mother is killed in a car crash.
The Best & Worst Foodie Movies
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28 June 2012
Don Groves dishes up some of the tastiest, and most turgid, examples of food on film.
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Thursday, 20th Jun
00:10
OSS 117: Lost In Rio
Oscar-winning actor Jean Dujardin stars as Hubert Bonisseur de la Bath, aka OSS 117, the French spy considered by his superiors to be the best in the business. The year is 1967 - Hubert's been sent on a mission to Rio de Janeiro, to find a former high-ranking Nazi who went into exile in South America after the war. Nominated for two César Awards in 2010. Directed by Michel Hazanavicius and also stars Louise Monot and Alex Lutz. (From France, in French) (Comedy) (2009) (Rpt) M (S,N,V,L) CC
Friday, 21st Jun
23:10
Borderline
An erotic drama about a woman facing her 30th birthday who looks back at her life growing-up with her grandmother, crazy mother and her over-indulgence with men, sex and alcohol. Winner of Best Canadian First Feature Film at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival. Directed by Lyne Charlebois and stars Isabelle Blais, Angèle Coutu and Sylvie Drapeau. (From Canada, in French Canadian) (2008) (Rpt) MA (L,S,A,N)
23:55
Sympathy For Lady Vengeance
Beautiful Lee Guem-ja is finally out of jail after thirteen years imprisonment for the kidnap and murder of a six-year-old boy. She can now start to seek revenge on the man who was really responsible for the boy's death. But will her actions lead to the relief she seeks? Nominated for Best Asian Film at the 2006 Hong Kong Film Awards. Directed by Park Chan-wook and stars Lee Yeong-ae, Choi Min-sik and Tony Barry. (From South Korea, in Korean) (Drama) (2005) (Rpt) MAV (V,S)
Saturday, 22nd Jun
21:30
Three Dollars
David Wenham stars as Eddie, an honest, compassionate man who finds himself with a wife, a child, and only three dollars to his name. Eddie’s life is rich with the pleasures and pains of love, family, and friendship, but with only three dollars in his pocket, he is faced with a choice that could change the direction of his life forever. Winner of the 2005 AFI Award for Best Adapted Screenplay. Directed by Robert Connolly, and also stars Frances O'Connor and Sarah Wynter. (From Australia) (Drama) (2005) (Rpt) M (S,V,L) CC
21:30
Kamui
Once a powerful ninja, Kamui decides to walk away from his violent ways and seek a peaceful life. His travels bring him to a seashore village where he meets Hanbei, a fisherman who shares the former ninja's sense of honour. They become good friends, and life at the seaside seems idyllic. But one day, a band of pirates arrive - It seems that Kamui's past life is catching up to him. Directed by Yoichi Sai and stars Ken'ichi Matsuyama, Koyuki and Kaoru Kobayashi. (From Japan, in Japanese) (Action/Adventure) (2009) MAV (V)
23:40
Me And You And Everyone We Know
A poetic and penetrating observation of how people struggle to connect with one another in an isolating and contemporary world. When Richard, a newly single shoe salesman, meets the lonely artist Christine, he panics, despite being captivated by her. Winner of four awards at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival, including the Critics Week Grand Prize. Directed by and stars Miranda July. Also stars John Hawkes and Miles Thompson. (From the US) (Comedy) (2005) (Rpt) MA (A,S) CC
Sunday, 23rd Jun
21:55
Revanche
Ex-con Alex plans to flee the city with his girlfriend after a bank robbery. But something terrible happens during the heist and revenge seems inevitable. Nominated for the 2009 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and winner of the CICAE Award at Berlin in 2008. Directed by Götz Spielmann and stars Johannes Krisch, Irina Potapenko and Andreas Lust. (From Austria, in German) (Drama) (2008) (Rpt) MA (S,A,L,N)
23:15
Fateless
The hypnotic story of a 14-year-old Jewish boy sent to a concentration camp. Life becomes a harrowing adventure, with small moments of beauty in a most unexpected environment. Based on the autobiographical novel by Nobel Prize winner Imre Kertesz, and nominated for the 2005 Golden Bear at Berlin. Directed by Lajos Koltai and stars Marcell Nagy, János Bán and György Gazsó. (From Hungary, in Hungarian and German) (Drama) (2005) (Rpt) M (A,L) CC
Monday, 24th Jun
00:40
Shinobi: Heart Under Blade
Romeo and Juliet, ninja-style. The film revolves around two forbidden lovers caught in the crossfire of their warring clans in 17th century Japan. A unique blend of romance, high-octane action and martial arts. Directed by Ten Shimoyama and stars Yukie Nakama, Jo Katagiri and Tomoka Kurotani. (From Japan, in Japanese) (Action/Adventure) (2005) (Rpt) MAV (V)
Tuesday, 25th Jun
23:05
An Ordinary Execution
Having exiled all of the Jewish doctors from Russia, Joseph Stalin finds his health quickly fading. He turns to a bold young doctor who has a good reputation, and a long list of enemies. While treating the paranoid dictator, she is forced listen to his twisted philosophies and becomes caught in his web of oppression. Directed by Marc Dugain and stars André Dussollier, Marina Hands and Edouard Baer. (From France, in French) (Drama) (2010) M (A)
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