I wanted to chime in...just 'cause. This is my favorite "food" movie, bar none, and the interesting thing is that it has less to do with the actual food served/shown, in some ways, than other sensual foodie flicks. It just works, the whole thing, as an analogy, in its contrast, in its size and scope, the suspense, on all the different levels it presents itself. The sappiest, most defensive and/but stubborn part of me knows that the line "Throughout the world sounds one long cry from the heart of the artist: Give me the chance to do my very best," is true, and that's what makes me bawl when I see it. Plus there's just something so freakin cool about Stephane Audran. She is completely convincing. It's not the happiest food movie ever (query: are they ever, usually? gotta think about that), but it's the most moving. It's also not *precious* in any foodie way (some of the early opera stuff might be, a little), but the food preparation isn't. The movie says a lot with a little and lets the action speak for itself. It's even a little harsh, and I like that. This is a pretty decent analysis of the particulars, from Priscilla Parkhurst Ferguson's Accounting for Taste: The Triumph of French Cuisine, which is a pretty decent book: http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/243230.html