Close Menu
Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Jump to Category…
    • All Events
    • Club Dates
    • Comedy
    • Exhibits
    • Film
    • Fundraisers
    • Learning
    • Literati
    • Outings
    • Other
    • Specials
    • Sports
    • Stage
    • Trivia
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Demo
    • CNY Events Calendar
      • Add My Event
      • Advertise On Calendar
    • News
      • News
      • Business
      • Sports
    • Arts
      • Art
      • Stage
      • Music
      • Film
      • Television
    • Lifestyle
      • Food
      • Wellness
      • Fashion
      • Travel
    • Opinion & Blogs
      • Things That Matter (Luke Parsnow)
      • New York Skies (Cheryl Costa)
    • Photos
    • Special Editions
      • 2019 Spring Times
      • 2019 Winter Times Edition
      • 2018 Holiday Times
      • 2018 SALT Awards
      • 2018 Best of Syracuse
      • 2018 Autumn Times
      • 2018 SNT Student Survival Guide
      • The 2018 Arts Issue
      • 2018 Summer Times
    • Family Times Magazine
    • CNY Community Guide
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Home»Arts»Film»Something hot’s cooking in The Hundred Foot Journey
    Film

    Something hot’s cooking in The Hundred Foot Journey

    Mark BialczakBy Mark BialczakAugust 11, 2014Updated:August 12, 2014No Comments3 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    There’s a lot more than the love of good food going on in The Hundred-Foot Journey.

    Sure, the basic premise behind the romantic comedy produced by the iconic duo of Oprah Winfrey and Steven Spielberg is that an Indian family buys a restaurant immediately across the road from a French restaurant and turns the town upside down with its ethnic cuisine.

    Son Hassan Kadam calls himself a cook, but he’s willing to put everything he learned in the family restaurant back home in Mumbai and the spices he brought in a suitcase from his dead mother to elevate good food and that stature.

    When the Kadams careen into this French town in a vehicle with failed brakes, they’re treated kindly by sous chef Marguerite, who works for single-minded and surly Madame Mallory, owner of Le Saule Pleureur. Patriarch Papa spots the formerly failed restaurant directly across the street from Madame Mallory’s place, buys it for his brood, and the war is on between classic French food and spicy Indian food, cultures, traditions, and, most significantly, Papa and Madame.

    Directed by Lasse Hallstrom from a screenplay by Steven Knight adapted from the book by Richard C. Morais, this film examines how barriers can seem impenetrable for days, weeks, months. And then …

    Actually, young Hassan and Marguerite are taken by each other from the start. Played quite fetchingly by Manish Dayal and Charlotte Le Bon, the two twenty-somethings strike an easy peace as she gives him great books on good cooking and he demonstrates a fine eye for learning in a new environment.

    Madame and Papa, on the other hand, find every which way to undermine the other place. Mallory has the wiles of a woman who already has one Michelin star to her credit, be it credited 30 years ago, before her husband died, and the aggressiveness of a restaurant owner who is going to get star No. 2. Papa has the knowledge from a successful restaurant run with his late wife back home in India before it burned down, and the drive to build another franchise to best serve his family.

    Helen Mirren and Om Puri are fabulous as Mallory and Papa, both unfathomably proud and passionate and more alike than either admit.

    Puri, by the way, is owner of the best schnoz in show biz since the late, great Walter Matthau. It’s big, bold and impressive. Om Puri’s nose deserves a credit of its own.

    It takes a near tragedy to begin to melt the tension. One of Madame’s staff gets his friends to vandalize the wall outside Papa’s restaurant, and start a fire inside the grounds. She stands up to the culprit, and the Kadams find her in the rain, scrubbing the offensive words off their front wall.

    There are many more ups and downs to come, some bitterness and plenty of sweet moments. It all led to claps at the finish from a fairly packed late afternoon Sunday crowd at Destiny USA.

    Interestingly enough, the romantic chemistry between Mirren and Puri was far more tangible than that between Daval and Le Bon. They really knew how to simmer the stew.

    FilmTag

     

     

     

    Mark BialczakMark Bialczak is a veteran journalist who has lived in the Syracuse area since 1983. In early 2013, he was set free to write about whatever he wants. Click here to read Mark’s BLOG.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Mark Bialczak

    Related Posts

    Finding Auditions in Upstate New York: Top Tips for Parents of Aspiring Child Actors

    October 10, 2024

    Greetings from Bikini Bottom: Tom Kenny, East Syracuse’s favorite cartoon voice, continues SpongeBob SquarePants legacy

    June 27, 2019

    Capitolfest 17 programs an August weekend of buried cinema treasures

    June 26, 2019

    Schlock Therapy: Drive-in movie maven brings redneck cinema tour to Syracuse

    May 8, 2019

    Troubled biopic on Big Easy jazz cornetist Buddy Bolden finally hits movie houses

    May 1, 2019

    Handle With Scares: Hitchcock, Spielberg, more at annual Salt City Horror Fest

    April 10, 2019

    Comments are closed.

    • CNY Events Calendar
    • Club Dates
    • Food & Drink
    • Destinations
    • Sports & Outdoors
    • Family Times
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Community Code of Conduct
    • Staff/Contact Us
    • Careers
    • SALT Academy Applications & Awards Process
    • Family Times
    • CNY Tix
    • Spinnaker Custom Products

    Syracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.