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Chef (2014 film)
Comedy film by Jon Favreau From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Chef is a 2014 road comedy-drama film written, produced, and directed by Jon Favreau, who also stars in the film as a celebrity chef who quits his job at a popular Los Angeles restaurant following a public altercation with a food critic and begins to operate a food truck with his friends and his young son. It co-stars Sofía Vergara, John Leguizamo, Scarlett Johansson, Oliver Platt, Bobby Cannavale, Amy Sedaris, Emjay Anthony, and Dustin Hoffman, along with Robert Downey Jr. in a cameo role.
Favreau wrote the script after directing several big-budget films, wanting to go "back to basics" and to create a film about cooking.[5] Food truck owner and chef Roy Choi served as a co-producer and oversaw the menus and food prepared for the film. Principal photography took place in July 2013 in Los Angeles, Miami, Austin and New Orleans.
Chef premiered at South by Southwest on March 7, 2014, and was released theatrically in the United States on May 9, 2014, by Open Road Films. It was well received by critics, who praised the direction, music, writing, story, and performances, and grossed $46 million against a production budget of $11 million.
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Plot
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Miami-born Carl Casper is the head chef of Gauloises in Brentwood, Los Angeles. Although popular with his kitchen staff and hostess Molly, he clashes with the restaurant's owner, Riva, who wants him to stick to the same menu of classical cuisine rather than innovative dishes. Carl also has a strained relationship with his rich ex-wife, Inez, and their tech-savvy preteen son, Percy.
When Carl has the chance to serve prestigious food critic and blogger Ramsey Michel, Riva demands he prepare old favorites at the last minute rather than the innovative ones he wants; Carl concedes, leading to a scathing review. Carl insults Ramsey on Twitter, not realizing that his reply is public, and gains a large online following. He comes up with a new menu that his staff loves and invites Ramsey to a "rematch", but while Carl and his crew are preparing for the new food items, Riva storms into the kitchen and demands Carl make the old menu again, demeaning him as nothing but a cook while he himself is the boss. Furious, Carl throws his apron and quits.
At home, Carl prepares the menu he wanted, drowning his anger through cooking while his sous-chef Tony serves Ramsey the same dishes from his prior visit. Learning that Carl had quit even before honoring their bet, Ramsey tweets negatively about Carl by mocking him as a coward for running away from their bet, provoking him into a confrontation at the restaurant. Videos of Carl's meltdown go viral, leaving him humiliated and unemployable.
After the fiasco at the restaurant, Carl loses his drive for cooking and with no one willing to employ him due to his explosive temperament shown online, Carl starts drowning his sorrows with liquor which prompts an offer from Inez who tells Carl to return to Miami and have a breather while visiting his old family back in Florida. While thinking about the offer, Molly gives Carl a motivational talk, telling him that his happy place is in the kitchen and he should not lose his passion just because of a bad incident, and the trip would help him unwind and forget the past. Carl reluctantly accepts Inez's invitation to accompany her and Percy to Miami, where he rediscovers his love for Cuban cuisine. At her encouragement, her ex-husband Marvin offers him a dilapidated food truck to restart his career. Carl and Percy bond while restoring the truck and buying groceries, and Carl gives him a chef's knife. Martin, Carl's friend and former line cook, turns down his promotion at Gauloises to join him, whose passion as a chef has been reignited.
Carl, Martin, and Percy drive the truck across the country to Los Angeles, serving Cuban sandwiches and yuca fries along their journey. Percy promotes them on social media, and they find success in New Orleans and Austin, where their daily specials include po' boys, beignets and barbecued brisket, made with local ingredients.
Back in Los Angeles, having strengthened his relationship with Percy, Carl accepts his son's offer to help with the food truck, with Inez also joining them. Ramsey visits the truck to explain his negative review: though an early fan of Carl, he was disappointed by a meal he felt was beneath Carl's skills and felt sorry for his harsh words after their row at the restaurant. Impressed with the chef's return to form, Ramsey offers to bankroll a new restaurant where Carl will have full creative control. Six months later, the successful new restaurant is open for Carl and Inez's remarriage ceremony.
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Cast
- Jon Favreau as Carl Casper
- Sofía Vergara as Inez Casper
- John Leguizamo as Martin
- Scarlett Johansson as Molly
- Dustin Hoffman as Riva
- Oliver Platt as Ramsey Michel
- Bobby Cannavale as Tony
- Amy Sedaris as Jen
- Emjay Anthony as Percy Casper
- Robert Downey Jr. as Marvin
- Russell Peters as Miami cop
Musician Gary Clark Jr., Franklin Barbecue owner Aaron Franklin, and general manager Benjamin Jacob make cameo appearances as themselves. Veteran Miami Cuban musician Jose Caridad Hernandez "Perico" appears as Inez Casper's father and Percy's grandfather ("Abuelito").[6]
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Production
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Development
Jon Favreau; the writer, director, and star of Chef; wrote the film's script in about two weeks.[7] He had long wanted to make a film about food and chefs, and felt that the subject was suited to a small-scale independent film rather than a big-budget production.[7][8] He cited Jiro Dreams of Sushi, Eat Drink Man Woman, and Big Night as inspirations for creating a food-centric film.[8]
The script was semi-autobiographical, incorporating parts of Favreau's life into the main character, such as being a father while having a busy career and coming from a "broken home".[7] Favreau also drew a comparison between his career as a director and Carl's career as a chef; he stepped down from directing major studio films to go "back to basics" and create Chef on a smaller budget, much like Carl's resignation from a popular restaurant to work in a food truck.[5]
Favreau contacted Roy Choi, a restaurateur who created the Kogi Korean BBQ food truck, to serve as a consultant on the film; Choi was eventually promoted to co-producer. While the film was in pre-production, Favreau shadowed Choi in his restaurants and worked as part of Choi's kitchen crew after training at a culinary school.[8] Choi oversaw the menus prepared for the film and created the Cuban sandwiches that form a central part of the storyline.[9]
Casting
In addition to Favreau, the first actors cast in main roles were Sofía Vergara, John Leguizamo and Bobby Cannavale. To prepare for his role as Martin the line cook, Leguizamo spent time working as an actual line cook at The Lion in the West Village.[10] It was announced that Robert Downey Jr.—whom Favreau had previously directed in two Iron Man films—had joined the cast in May 2013.[11] Scarlett Johansson and Dustin Hoffman were cast later that month.[12][13] Favreau felt the casting was one of the film's biggest successes, which provided him with "a tremendous amount of confidence"; in particular, he was impressed by Emjay Anthony, who was ten years old at the time of filming.[5]
Filming
Scenes in Miami were filmed at the Fontainebleau Hotel (left) and the Versailles restaurant (right).
Principal photography of the film began in July 2013 in Los Angeles.[14] Subsequent filming took place in Miami, Austin and New Orleans—cities that Favreau chose to work into the story because they all "possess a rich food and music culture".[15] Filming locations in Miami included the Versailles restaurant, the Fontainebleau Hotel, and the Cuban nightclub Hoy Como Ayer in Little Havana.[16][17] In New Orleans, some scenes were filmed at Café du Monde in the city's French Quarter.[18]
In Austin, filming locations included Franklin Barbecue and Guero's on South Congress.[19] Filming of the shopping scene took place in Los Angeles at Charlie's Fixtures.[20] Food prepared for the shoot was eaten by the cast and crew after filming.[8] Much of the dialogue in the food truck scenes between Favreau, John Leguizamo, and Emjay Anthony was improvised in order to capture the banter of a kitchen environment.[21]
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Soundtrack
Milan Records released a Chef soundtrack on May 6, 2014, three days before the film's release.[22] The soundtrack is a combination of Latin jazz, New Orleans jazz and blues, which serve as background to the storyline as it moves through Miami, New Orleans and Austin, respectively.[23] The film's music was chosen by music supervisor Mathieu Schreyer,[24] while additional incidental music was scored by Lyle Workman.[22]
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Release
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Chef premiered on March 7, 2014, at South by Southwest, where it was the opening film of the festival and was attended by Favreau, Leguizamo, Anthony, and Platt.[25] It was subsequently screened at the Tribeca Film Festival in April.[8] On August 19, Open Road Films announced to re-release the film in the United States on August 29 for a Labor Day weekend, which would grow 100 screens to 600–800.[26]
Home media
Chef came out on September 30, 2014 on DVD and Blu-ray.
Box office
The film was released theatrically in the United States on May 9, 2014, beginning in limited release in six theaters and expanding throughout May and June to a peak of 1,298 theaters.[27] Its total gross in the United States as of November 2, 2014 is $31.4 million.[4]
Outside of the U.S., Chef performed best in Australia (earning $2.8 million), the United Kingdom and Spain ($2.6 million in each country) and Mexico (earning a little over $1 million). In total, Chef has grossed almost $15 million outside the United States.[28]
Critical response
On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 87% based on 191 reviews, with an average rating of 6.8/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Chef's charming cast and sharp, funny script add enough spice to make this feel-good comedy a flavorful—if familiar—treat."[29] Metacritic gave the film a score of 68 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[30]
Rolling Stone's Peter Travers gave the film 3.5 out of 4 stars, describing it as "an artful surprise and an exuberant gift" and "deliciously entertaining, comic, touching and often bitingly true".[31] Ty Burr of The Boston Globe also awarded the film 3.5 out of 4 stars; he thought it was "funny and heartfelt" and that, despite its weaknesses, the strengths "overpower the parts of the meal that are undercooked".[32] Chicago Sun-Times critic Richard Roeper gave Chef 3 out of 4 stars, finding it "funny, quirky and insightful, with a bounty of interesting supporting characters" but also noting the lack of plot and character development in some parts.[33] Gary Goldstein of the Los Angeles Times gave particular praise to the "terrific supporting cast" and the script's lack of cliché, such as in its presentation of family dynamics.[34]
Joe Leydon from Variety found the film's plot predictable and slow-paced, but noted "the trip itself is never less than pleasant, and often extremely funny".[35] The New York Times' Stephen Holden described Chef as "aggressively feel-good" and "shallow but enjoyable".[36] Michael O'Sullivan of The Washington Post gave the film 3.5 out of 4 stars and found it "deeply satisfying, down to the soul", praising the "incredible" food photography, the "colorful supporting cast" and the "wryly observant" humor, raving, "There's nothing terribly profound about "Chef". But its message—that relationships, like cooking, take a hands-on approach—is a sweet and sustaining one."[37] SFGate film critic Mick LaSalle opined that Chef was Favreau's best film to date, highlighting the "natural and convincing" chemistry between Favreau and Anthony and the "vivid" scenes featuring big-name actors in small roles.[38]
USA Today's Scott Bowles gave Chef 3.5 out of 4 stars and called it "a nuanced side dish, a slow-cooked film that's one of the most heartwarming of the young year".[39] Ken Choy of Wide Lantern noted the structural problems but admitted, "If you ever saw the Kristen Bell sloth video on Ellen, that was me during the entire 2nd half of the movie. Non-stop tears. It was happy-crying because Favreau's character was doing what he wanted."[40]
Slant Magazine critic Chris Cabin, gave Chef a 1.5 out of 4 stars and described it as Favreau's "most self-satisfied, safe, and compromised film to date", chiefly criticizing the film's lack of realism and credibility.[41] Writing for The Village Voice, Amy Nicholson agreed that the storyline was implausible and summarized the film as "so charmingly middlebrow that it's exactly the cinematic comfort food it mocks".[42] Indiewire's Eric Kohn opined that with Chef, "Favreau has no sweeping thematic aims", and that the end product was a "self-indulgent vanity project".[43]
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Television series
In 2019, Favreau and Choi released a documentary television spin-off on Netflix, The Chef Show, that sees Jon Favreau and Roy Choi, "experiment with their favorite recipes and techniques, baking, cooking, exploring and collaborating with some bold-face names in the entertainment and culinary world".[44] A second season was released in 2020.
Remake
In 2017, the film was remade into an Indian Hindi comedy-drama, also titled Chef, by Raja Krishna Menon, featuring Saif Ali Khan and Padmapriya Janakiraman in the lead roles.[45]
References
External links
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