jlawrence01 wrote:chitrader wrote:I am not particularly interested in seeing a movie where we watch a food truck owner stand around waiting for inspectors and going to stand in line at the Department of Health for a permit.
I really liked Chef, despite all pollyanna-ish tone of the movie, just because it was pretty neat to see Jon Favreau show off his semi-decent knife skills that he learned for the movie. He obviously cares about food, and that's what was the best part of the film.
I liked the movie a lot.
As for the inconsistencies, he cleaned up the truck and installed the equipment and fed the workers for free in the UNPAINTED truck. Then it cut to the scene where he had the truck painted and permit received. Having past experiences with the city of St. Louis, I would hate to see all the time it would take to get a permit.
If you noticed the outtakes at the end of the movie, you would see Jon Favreau getting instructions from a chef on how to prepare a grilled cheese sandwich.
Jefe wrote:Just watched "Chef". Made me embarrassed of my LTH handle. Got a yuck out of the corn starch gag, but generally have a short attention span for feel good sentimentality.
And definitely, this:
Jonah wrote:Man, if you think the food permit stuff in Chef (which I liked) was unrealistic, how about a paunchy high strung chef being married to Sofia Vergara and having Scarlett Johanson as his girlfriend.
ALSO, in what world is there a millionaire food critic?
boudreaulicious wrote:Ha! Good to hear there's another curmudgeon (

)out there. I like the mindless "feel good" flick genre more often than not but Chef just bugged me start to finish. Smug and silly. Not my thing.
Edgy, this movie is not but 10+ years later, I find it full of little charms. Jon Favreau's love of food and cooking -- and his kitchen skills -- come across loud and clear. The food porn, much of it guided/provided by Roy Choi, is lovely and highly appetizing. Many father/son moments between Carl and Percy, while quite sentimentally depicted, resonate nicely and ring true. Pardon the pun but even though some of those moments feel a bit 'served up,' they work.
Additional performances by Dustin Hoffman, John Leguizamo, Bobby Cannavale, Scarlett Johansson, Oliver Platt and Emjay Anthony (as Percy) are all solid. And a bit part played by Amy Sedaris is fleshed out hysterically.
It's been on cable this month and I've been catching pieces of it from time to time. True, the overall narrative is not as nearly as engaging or successful as many of the moments along the way (less than the sum of its parts?) but I still think there's a lot to like here. As for Carl's parnters -- played by Sofía Vergara and Scarlett Johansson -- let's not forget that the film is, after all, a piece of fiction!

=R=
Same planet, different world