Beauty and the feast: Savoring 鈥楾he Taste of Things鈥
What happens when you combine sumptuous food with a tender drama? French film 鈥淭he Taste of Things鈥 features one of the most romantic movie moments our critic has ever seen.
What happens when you combine sumptuous food with a tender drama? French film 鈥淭he Taste of Things鈥 features one of the most romantic movie moments our critic has ever seen.
The marvelous new French film 鈥淭he Taste of Things,鈥 set in 1885, opens with a culinary flourish. Eug茅nie (Juliette Binoche), the head cook of a famed Loire Valley ch芒teau, is whipping up a storm in the kitchen. She swings adroitly between kettles, saucepans, stovetops, and basins as she conjures a potpourri of delicacies 鈥 all of which the writer-director, Tr岷 Anh H霉ng, exhibits for us in glistening array. The camera, along with Eug茅nie and her assistant, Violette (Galat茅a Bellugi), never stops moving. It鈥檚 such a hunger-inducing display that the effect is almost comical. My first thought was: If the entire movie is like this, I am never going to get through it.
Eug茅nie鈥檚 boss, Dodin Bouffant (Beno卯t Magimel), is also her sometime lover. For 20 years they have lived together in the ch芒teau, though in separate quarters. (It鈥檚 worth noting that Magimel and Binoche were once a couple, and share a daughter.) A nationally famed gourmet, Dodin regularly hosts a gathering of all-male friends and investors who savor the dishes that Eug茅nie fervently prepares to his specifications.
The men, no chauvinists, are always clamoring for her to join in the meal, but she is content to stay apart from the festivities. Her refusal is almost a point of pride. She sees herself as a kind of magician, as indeed she is. She doesn鈥檛 need anyone to tell her how good the meal is. She already knows.
Eug茅nie鈥檚 hauteur, gentle but willful, is an indication of how she values herself. This is no 鈥淯pstairs, Downstairs鈥 scenario. Eug茅nie is fully Dodin鈥檚 equal 鈥 if not in class, then in everything else. It is he, and not she, who regularly implores that they get married. She clearly believes that being his star cook elevates her above mere domesticity. Wifedom would seem like a comedown. And so for a long stretch of the movie, the perpetually smitten Dodin must content himself with her occasional amatory favors. Her beauty has the same ambrosial effect on him as her feasts.
Most of the celebrated movies centering on lavish repasts, from 鈥淟a Grande Bouffe鈥 and 鈥淏abette鈥檚 Feast鈥 to 鈥淏ig Night,鈥 have used food as a metaphor for what else is really going on in people鈥檚 lives. 鈥淭he Taste of Things,鈥 which was the French Oscar entry for best international feature, does this to an extreme degree. Even though the scrumptious factor in this film is very high, it never turns into a foodie pageant. H霉ng 鈥 whose script is very loosely based on the 1924 novel 鈥淭he Passionate Epicure鈥 by Marcel Rouff 鈥 is careful to keep the focus on Eug茅nie and Dodin. Both are played with exquisite feeling by Binoche and Magimel.聽
H霉ng frames their romance in imagery that sometimes recalls the paintings of Gustave Courbet and Pierre-Auguste Renoir, but never self-consciously so. He wants to suggest a continuum between the two lovers and those artists. Eug茅nie and Dodin, too, are artists. Like those painters, they share a rhapsodic embrace of nature.
It is this embrace that gives 鈥淭he Taste of Things鈥 its quietly passionate core. We are never made to ask how, in this disruptive late 19th-century era, these people are able to live their gilded lives with such abandon. The film periodically risks turning into a swoony fantasy. But it is a fantasy we can favor because it鈥檚 one we all can share.
Eug茅nie may covet her independence, but she also recognizes the love that Dodin bears for her, and she for him. This love is never so apparent as when her periodic fainting spells turn serious. Dodin may be renowned as 鈥渢he Napoleon of gastronomy,鈥 but imperiousness has no place in his life. As Eug茅nie lies bedridden, he cooks her favorite meal for her. Then, almost as if he were praying, he asks if he may watch her eat it. It鈥檚 one of the most romantic movie moments I鈥檝e ever seen. And, of course, she says yes.
Peter Rainer is the Monitor鈥檚 film critic. 鈥淭he Taste of Things鈥 is rated PG-13聽for some sensuality, partial nudity, and smoking. It is in French with English subtitles.