Movies/Films with Food-Related Themes
#1
Posted 17 April 2002 - 02:44 PM
http://www.londonfoo...~1/Foodfi~1.htm
I have others to add: Mystic Pizza (yucky film, but good pizza), Vatel, Frankie and Johnny, Diner, The Joy Luck Club, Who is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe (HOW did this not get on the London list?), I Love You To Death, Waiting (see info at www.waitingthemovie.com).
On a related note, (should this be a separate thread?) did anyone get to the Slow Food on Film Festival in Italy last week? Winning films can be viewed at www.slowfood.com.
Do food films make you hungry? Do they drive you to the kitchen? Have you ever shown or been shown one as "dessert" at a dinner party? Have you a favorite food film? (Yes, Hannibal counts!)
#2
Posted 17 April 2002 - 03:30 PM
I was decidedly NOT hungary after watching Delicatessen, though I thoroughly enjoyed it. However I did happen to see this at one of those theaters that serves food and beer. I ordered the hot wings with Dave's Insanity sauce and bucket of beer.
#3
Posted 17 April 2002 - 03:39 PM
#4
Posted 17 April 2002 - 04:22 PM
The Big Night. I loved the simple breakfast scene at the end.
Eat, Drink, Man, Woman. Also Ang Lee's The Wedding Banquet.
"Behold, I teach you the ubermunch. The ubermunch is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: the ubermunch shall be the meaning of the earth!" -Fritzy N.
"It's okay to like celery more than yogurt, but it's not okay to think that batter is yogurt."
Serving fine and fresh gratuitous comments since Oct 5 2001, 09:53 PM
#5
Posted 17 April 2002 - 06:16 PM
#6
Posted 18 April 2002 - 12:30 AM
Adam
#7
Posted 18 April 2002 - 01:11 AM
Babette's Feast is an interesting meditation on the unifying power of food but is a little too arty and aesthetic to really work as Food Porn-maybe Food Erotica instead-more intellectual but not half as much fun.
Hitchcock's Frenzy has a running theme whereby the policeman's wife is doing a Cordon Bleu course and is always serving him up "fancy" French food when all he's dreaming of is a plate of Bangers and Mash.
#8
Posted 18 April 2002 - 07:10 AM
#9
Posted 18 April 2002 - 07:23 AM
l'Americaine. Boyer is a waiter who takes over the management of Victor's Cafe in NY, while searching for Jean Arthur, who has left her nasty husband ...
#10
Posted 18 April 2002 - 08:21 AM
They wouldn't have used butter today. They'd have used FloraWhat about Last Tango in Paris?
#11
Posted 18 April 2002 - 08:28 AM
Confession - I've never seen it. They did screen it a college but I was so fr**in bored that I walked out after 1/2 hour.They wouldn't have used butter today. They'd have used Flora
#12
Posted 18 April 2002 - 08:42 AM
That's my favorite food film as well, because of the sumptuousness of the colors and the depiction of the repeated visits to the same restaurant.'The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover.' That's all I'm going to say.
Adam
#13
Posted 18 April 2002 - 08:57 AM
#14
Posted 18 April 2002 - 08:58 AM
Also, the recent film "Chocolat" with Juliette Binoche playing a chocolatier (or is it chocolatiere?) in a small French town, will get your juices flowing if you like sweet things.
#15
Posted 18 April 2002 - 09:41 AM
Wilfrid, I agree about "Chocolat"--I was practically desperate for some of that hot chocolate! The scene where Juliette Binoche gets Judi Dench to try it is wonderfully amusing.
#16
Posted 18 April 2002 - 10:30 AM
Yes, my first choice, too -- not just for the food, but for the attitude toward it: an expression of the redeeming power of food, as art and sustenance and therefore, true spirituality contrasted with the spiritual emptiness of the "religious" true believers. It's one of my favorite movies.My number one choice in that category is "Babette's Feast".
#17
Posted 18 April 2002 - 10:47 AM
This isn't a food-related movie, but my absolute favorite moment in the Red Dwarf series is when Lister orders breakfast from the somewhat faulty vending machine in the hallway. "I'll have a milkshake." "What flavor?"
I recently saw Bandits on a cross-country plane flight. I got really annoyed at the uneducated food stuff in there. There's this woman cutting up vegetables for a mirepoix in such an unsafe and ridiculous manner...and then later an idiotic discussion about saffron being the secret to somebody's pasta sauce. Didn't the scriptwriters have a food geek they could ask about this stuff? This annoys me as much as my partner Erin (who is a choral conductor) gets annoyed at watching actors' efforts to "conduct." We're real fun to watch movies with.
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#18
Posted 18 April 2002 - 11:53 AM
#19
Posted 18 April 2002 - 01:08 PM
#20
Posted 18 April 2002 - 01:44 PM
http://www.londonfoo...~1/Felici~1.htm
Another good resource is the Internet Movie Database
http://us.imdb.com/Find
And welcome to eGullet, Scout!
#21
Posted 18 April 2002 - 02:53 PM
#22
Posted 19 April 2002 - 06:05 AM
Am still waiting for Dinner Rush to be released...
Give a man a fish, he eats for a Day.
Teach a man to fish, he eats for Life.
Teach a man to sell fish, he eats Steak
#23
Posted 19 April 2002 - 06:09 AM
Dude. Why didn't I think of that? I've wanted to try to make a rose-petal sauce ever since I saw that movie. The cream fritters sounded amazing too.How about Like Water for Chocolate?
Welcome to eGullet.
Diary of a Cooking School Student
Foodblog: 34 Hungry College Girls
Foodblog: Expecting a Future Culinary Student
Lots of Everything
#24
Posted 19 April 2002 - 06:14 AM
http://worldfilm.abo...eredlantern.htm
And, "Shawshank Redemption", one of my favorite films (the food scenes are not the reason I like it; more the theme of perseverence). It contains scenes in which prison politics are played out in the form of bullies' handling of the protagonist's food and the significance of seating arrangements in prison cateens.
#25
Posted 19 April 2002 - 07:44 AM
Wonderful film."Raise the Red Lantern" by Zhang Yimou. The food scenes in this move are very limited, though.
I actually did make spinach with tofu after watching it.
"Behold, I teach you the ubermunch. The ubermunch is the meaning of the earth. Let your will say: the ubermunch shall be the meaning of the earth!" -Fritzy N.
"It's okay to like celery more than yogurt, but it's not okay to think that batter is yogurt."
Serving fine and fresh gratuitous comments since Oct 5 2001, 09:53 PM
#26
Posted 19 April 2002 - 07:52 AM
#27
Posted 19 April 2002 - 10:22 AM
You may now officially start posting jokes, Scorsese-type casting decisions, and Scorsese-like dialog for this movie.
Deniro (as Wonka): Do... you... want a chocolate bar? DO YOU WANT A CHOCOLATE BAR?!?
#28
Posted 19 April 2002 - 10:36 AM
#29
Posted 19 April 2002 - 11:19 AM
European films in the 60s&70s by left wing film makers,such as Bunuel and Pasolini, often used food as a metaphor for the excessive consumption of the Bourgeoisie, and treated the process of eating and drinking with ironic disgust.The British film "The Cook The Thief His Wife and Her Lover" continue this tradition.
Eastern influenced food films such as "Tampopo" and "Eat Drink Man Woman" stress the unifying and harmonising power of food,as doesthe sweet(in the best sense of the word) film "Big Night".
Food used to be a political issue in films. Is it now?
#30
Posted 19 April 2002 - 03:51 PM
markstevens, I believe that Dinner Rush has come quietly and gone already to video. A friend saw it on a British Airways flight back in March.
robert brown, sorry, but it's Cookbook Lady, not Checkbook Lady. (Although my husband might disagree.) As a Canadian, I would have to be "cquebklady" to be Chequebook Lady. Besides, I usually pay cash.
My favorite food film is Frankie and Johnny - endless shots of the greasy spoon kitchen never fail to drive me into my own kitchen and dive into a fry-up.









