CHEF (2014) – The Blu Review

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The Movie on its own merit…

There are some experiences that, while not life changing, are life reaffirming and leave an impression not easily forgotten. Arguably, the best kinds of these experiences are the ones that are fully unexpected. Being caught off guard, leaving the unmistakable mark of joy stretched across one’s face. Moments that make us smile, spontaneously. I am reminded of the very first time I had an authentic Cuban sandwich, which happened to be off a food truck in Austin, Texas. Watching Jon Favreau’s newest film, CHEF, is the cinematic equivalent.

From the filmmaker who MADE (2001) an independent first impression, immortalized Will Ferrell as a holiday staple in ELF (2003) and realized the IRON MAN trilogy on the big screen, its refreshing to see writer and director Jon Favreau returning to his smaller, indie roots with CHEF. Favreau also stars as the film’s central character, Carl Casper, a Los Angeles based chef of notoriety struggling with finding his culinary identity under the oppressive control of restauranteur Riva, playfully illustrated by Dustin Hoffman. Affectionately referred to by those dear to him as “El Jefe,” Carl has a falling out with Riva after a devastating review by acclaimed food blogger Ramsey Michel, played with restrained confidence by Oliver Platt. Carl now reflects on his life and career, while stumbling through attempts to reconnect with his son Percy, played by Emjay Anthony.

At a loss for direction or opportunity after his very public celebrity outburst, captured and made viral by social media, Carl takes the advice of his ex-wife Inez (played by Sofia Vergara) and builds a business from the ground up. Carl reluctantly accepts the help of Inez’s other ex-husband Marvin (played by Robert Downey, Jr.) who sets him up with a fixer-upper food truck, which he quickly converts into an authentic taste of Little Havana on wheels. With the help of his former protege Martin (played by John Leguizamo), and his son Percy, Carl dubs the food truck El Jefe and the three out on a cross country road trip from Miami to Los Angeles, stopping in city after city making simple, quality Cuban food as Percy secretly used the very social media outlets that burned his father to raise him up from the ashes and become the underdog phoenix of the food world once again.

Favreau allows himself to break out of his mold a bit in this role, clearly showing a touch of personal sentimentality. Between his performance and his uncharacteristically full quaff, viewers may not recognize him at first, but will be pleasantly surprised. Favreau evokes a level and range of emotion that is believable and down to earth. His chemistry with his supporting cast is equally compelling as the cast lineup itself. From the scenes in the kitchen of Riva’s restaurant along side sous-chef Tony (played by Bobby Cannavale) to his casual friend with benefits relationship with hostess Molly (played by Scarlett Johansson) the interaction of characters is witty and fresh. The cameo roles in the film, which also includes Amy Sedaris and Russell Peters, are all played with a bit more of their tongues in cheek, adding a welcome and easily palatable flavor of fun to the film.

CHEF presents a topic of growing interest with food trucks, through the perspective of a culture often absent or misrepresented in film, adding humor and tastefully developed family drama without getting cheesy or overwrought. Favreau has made a film that honors the working class, promotes a realistic interpretation of modern family dynamics with a strong moral underpinning without getting preachy, while also commenting quite cleverly on the state of interpersonal communication through social media. Its as if Favreau himself decided to take a step back from all the big budget, high technology stress of Hollywood blockbuster filmmaking to decompress and reconnect with life by way of making a small, independent film with a solid story of human connection absent of gadgets and the Internet.

In addition to the well-written script and the array of familiar faces, CHEF also showcases some pretty spectacular snippets of music that add even more to that cultural flair that lives within the underlying theme of reconnecting to one’s family and roots. From the expected ode to Cuban music, both overlaid and on screen, to familiar favorites and live indie performances including Gary Clark, Jr. in Austin, CHEF is as much a music lover’s film as it is a film for foodies.

Technicalities & Extra Stuff

With all good things comes a catch, or so they say, and the one singular complaint about this home media release of CHEF is that the audio appeared to be poorly mastered. I found myself repeatedly adjusting the volume between dialogue scenes and the louder, more vibrant musically endowed scenes. This is rare, for someone like myself who watches as many films as I do and puts my surround sound through such rigorous routines, I ruled out the issue being my home theater technology. With that said, getting past this technological fault is easy to do given the pleasure of watching the film.

CHEF is presented in a Blu-ray/DVD/Digital HD with Ultraviolet combo on a single disc with a slip cover. Bonus features are limited, including the always candid feature commentary of writer/director Jon Favreau along side chef/co-producer Roy Choi, and the ever present and simply stated “deleted scenes” that serves a mostly questionable purpose and interest — most of the time — in my personal opinion.

Overall Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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LUCY – The Review

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How can a film exist somewhere between being an ambitious Hollywood oddity and a wacky hot mess of a film? Days after seeing Luc Besson’s new film LUCY I’m still trying to figure this out. Going into a Besson film you have to expect a strong female-centered action-fest. The French director has made a career of this going back to LA FEMME NIKITA, to THE FIFTH ELEMENT, all the way to his more recent Indiana Jones and Allan Quatermain inspired period piece THE EXTRAORDINARY ADVENTURE OF ADELE BLANC-SEC (which exists relatively unnoticed and is worth checking out if you’re a fan of pulp adventure stories). However LUCY kind of exists in a different conversation than these previously mentioned films for a lot of reasons. First of all, despite her stunning features, Johansson’s Lucy is nowhere near as memorable as some of the leads in these other films. But the most obvious difference is the simple fact that LUCY is such a bizarre movie even for a director known for occasionally dabbling in risky material.

If the opening shot of what is believed to be the earliest form of humanity drinking from a creek doesn’t signal that we might be in for more than what the trailers for the film have promised, just wait till Besson starts cutting back and forth between shots of a crime deal in a hotel and deadly animals hunting one another in the wild. Scarlett Johansson as the title character is the unlucky lady who gets coerced into delivering a briefcase to a gang of Asian mobsters led by Choi Min-sik (OLDBOY, I SAW THE DEVIL). The tense showdown culminates in her being forced to act as a drug mule for a new drug that is described as a chemical mothers inject into their child naturally during pregnancy. It’s described as igniting new cells through reactions between existing cells. All doesn’t go as planned when Lucy is kidnapped on her way to the airport by other bad guys (I guess?) – this girl has the worst luck – and hit and kicked in the stomach by her captors. And just as you can expect, she suddenly experiences extreme changes in her mental and physical self due to the large dosage now streaming through her body.

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The premise of the film explains that humans only use 10% of our brains. You will need less than 10 minutes to do a little bit of research and find out that that statistic is completely made up. Of course this doesn’t stop Besson from announcing throughout the film her gradual mental increase from 10% to 20% and so on and so on. While much of the “science” explained in the film by a researcher played by Morgan Freeman is treated in a serious tone, LUCY also seems to be smirking a bit at the audience. Some of the sequences and dialogue are so outrageous and occasionally silly that you almost get the feeling that the film is poking fun at the idea that its presenting. There’s a fun and breezy manner to how the film effortlessly bounces between pseudo-intellectual theories, car chases, evolutionary theories, and gun battles. Fans hoping for a more action-centric thriller like the trailers seem to promise might be disappointed that LUCY at times feels more comfortable sitting in an art-house theater and getting high while watching 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY than pretending to be a Liam Neeson or Jason Bourne wannabe.

LUCY may strive at times to be a “big idea” film like THE MATRIX or the previous mentioned Kubrick masterpiece, and while it doesn’t come close to the lofty heights of those films, you have to applaud the film for striving to be more than most of the films that Besson has produced as of late (TAKEN 2, COLOMBIANA, LOCKOUT). Many critics will be quick to compare this to TRANSCENENCE from earlier this year; especially considering the theme represented by the ending. But while that film from earlier this year got wrapped up in its own long and boring lectures, LUCY keeps it short and entertains far more in 90 minutes straight than just 5 minutes of that earlier slog.

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Even amidst all the highbrow intellectualism, there are plenty of exploitation elements that make this feel like a trashy grindhouse film. Johansson runs around in a see-through white top with exposed black bra for almost the entire film and shoots more innocent bystanders than actual bad guys – for instance a cab driver gets a bullet to the head simply because he can’t speak English. It is moments like this where you find yourself with your mouth agape more than you mind expanding like our superhuman heroine.

Depending on your mood, you might be more open to some of the heavily stylized visuals and directions Besson and cinematographer Thierry Arbogast take it. Watching animals being born or stalked by rival beasts as seen in LUCY can be taken out of context and seem absolutely ridiculous. However the film delivers such imagery with such confidence and gives off a feeling that it knows exactly what it wants to be – even if the audience is constantly in-flux as to where they might fall with their opinion on the film.

3 out of 5

LUCY is now showing in theaters everywhere

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New Photos & Concept Art Posters For Marvel’s AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON

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In their annual Comic Con issue, Entertainment Weekly had the first photos for Joss Whedon’s AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON. You may have seen them in EW’s magazine or online, but in case you missed them, we got them all for you right here.

In addition, Marvel also revealed new concept art posters from the film.

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Marvel’s Avengers: Age Of Ultron..Captain America/Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) and Thor (Chris Hemsworth)..Ph: Jay Maidment..©Marvel 2015.

Earlier this year when shooting began in March and before CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER was released in April, producer Kevin Feige discussed how it related to AGE OF ULTRON.

“CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER was set up to be the Phase 2 lynchpin between MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS and AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON. The Marvel Cinematic Universe changes dramatically by the end of the film, and that was by design.”

“We really wanted Captain America to be responsible for altering the Cinematic Universe so that when we meet all of our characters at the beginning of “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” things are very different than when we left the characters at the end of “Marvel’s The Avengers” and partially that’s the experience Tony Stark went through in “Iron Man 3” and partially that’s the experience of what Thor went through in “Thor: The Dark World,” but primarily it’s because of the adventure that Captain America goes on in “Captain America: The Winter Soldier.”

The film took in a whopping $95 million on it’s opening weekend. Read Jim Batts’ review HERE.

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Marvel’s Avengers: Age Of Ultron..Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Steve Rogers/Captain America (Chris Evans), Clint Barton/Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner), Tony Stark/Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) and James “Rhodey” Rhodes/War Machine (Don Cheadle)..Ph: Film Frame..©Marvel 2015

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Marvel’s Avengers: Age Of Ultron..Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson)..Ph: Jay Maidment..©Marvel 2015

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Marvel’s Avengers: Age Of Ultron..Bruce Banner/Hulk (Mark Ruffalo) and Tony Stark/Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.)..Ph: Jay Maidment..©Marvel 2015

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Marvel’s Avengers: Age Of Ultron..Hawkeye/Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner) ..Ph: Jay Maidment..©Marvel 2015

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Marvel’s Avengers: Age Of Ultron..Quicksilver/Pietro Maximoff (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Scarlet Witch/Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen)..Ph: Jay Maidment..©Marvel 2015

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Elizabeth Olsen (Scarlet Witch/Wanda Maximoff), Director Joss Whedon, and Jeremy Renner (Hawkeye) on set. Ph: Jay Maidment. ©Marvel 2015

Directed by Joss Whedon (“Marvel’s The Avengers”), the film returns its iconic cast, including Robert Downey Jr. (“Iron Man 3,” “Marvel’s The Avengers”) as Tony Stark/Iron Man along with Chris Hemsworth (“Thor: The Dark World,” “Marvel’s The Avengers”) as Thor, Mark Ruffalo (“Marvel’s The Avengers,” “Now You See Me”) as Hulk, Chris Evans (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Marvel’s The Avengers”) as Captain America, Scarlett Johansson (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Marvel’s The Avengers”) as Black Widow, Jeremy Renner (“American Hustle,” “Marvel’s The Avengers,”) as Hawkeye, and Samuel L. Jackson (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Marvel’s The Avengers”) as Nick Fury.

Joining the cast are Aaron Taylor-Johnson (“Godzilla,” “Kick Ass 2″) as Quicksilver, Elizabeth Olsen (“Godzilla”) as Scarlet Witch and James Spader (“The Blacklist,” “Lincoln”) as Ultron.

Set for release in the United States on May 1, 2015, Marvel’s AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON is produced by Kevin Feige. Executive Producers are Louis D’Esposito, Jeremy Latcham, Victoria Alonso, Patricia Whitcher, Alan Fine, Stan Lee, and Jon Favreau.

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GIVEAWAY – Win A LUCY Movie Prize Pack From Universal Pictures

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From La Femme Nikita and The Professional to The Fifth Element, writer/director Luc Besson has created some of the toughest, most memorable female action heroes in cinematic history.

Now, Besson directs Scarlett Johansson in LUCY, an action-thriller that tracks a woman accidentally caught in a dark deal who turns the tables on her captors and transforms into a merciless warrior evolved beyond human logic.

WAMG invites you to enter a Prize Pack from LUCY!

One (1) winner receives:

  • Unlock your full potential with a $25 Visa gift card
  • Plus a LUCY T-Shirt & Hat

Courtesy of Universal Pictures

ENTER YOUR NAME AND E-MAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.  WE WILL CONTACT YOU IF YOU ARE A WINNER.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES. NO P.O. BOXES. NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.  NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.  PRIZES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED.

CONTEST ENDS – AUGUST 1st, 11:59p est

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LUCY will be in theaters July 25

Visit the official website
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See Scarlett Johansson In Advance Screening Of The LUCY Movie In St. Louis

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From La Femme Nikita and The Professional to The Fifth Element, writer/director Luc Besson has created some of the toughest, most memorable female action heroes in recent cinematic history.

Now, Besson directs Scarlett Johansson (Captain America: The Winter Soldier, The Avengers) and Academy Award® winner Morgan Freeman (The Dark Knight Rises, Oblivion) in LUCY, an action-thriller that examines the possibility of what one human could truly do if she unlocked 100 percent of her brain capacity and accessed the furthest reaches of her mind.

From Universal Pictures, LUCY opens in theaters on July 25th.

WAMG invites you to enter to win passes to the advance screening of LUCY on Tuesday, July 22nd in the St. Louis area.

Answer the following:

The human brain and its capabilities have long puzzled and deeply fascinated the most accomplished of scientists. While it has customarily been understood that we tap into much less of our mind’s capacity than we are capable of using, the exact percentage has remained uncertain…and ever fluctuating.

If each one of the 86 billion densely packed neurons in a human brain fired at once, could that person become, in fact, superhuman?

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. ENTER YOUR NAME AND ANSWER IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

3. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

The film is rated R for Strong Violence, Disturbing Images and Sexuality.

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Photo Credit: Jessica Forde © 2014 Universal Studios. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Watch Scarlett Johansson In New LUCY TV Spot

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Scarlett Johansson and Academy Award winner Morgan Freeman are featured in the latest TV spot for the upcoming movie, LUCY.

From La Femme Nikita and The Professional to The Fifth Element, writer/director Luc Besson has created some of the toughest, most memorable female action heroes in cinematic history.

Now, Besson directs Scarlett Johansson in LUCY, an action-thriller that tracks a woman accidentally caught in a dark deal who turns the tables on her captors and transforms into a merciless warrior evolved beyond human logic.

The film hits theaters on July 25th.

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https://twitter.com/LucyTheMovie
http://instagram.com/LucyTheMovie

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LUCY Poster Features Scarlett Johansson

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Check out the new poster for Universal Pictures’ LUCY starring Scarlett Johansson. The film opens in theaters on July 25th.

From La Femme Nikita and The Professional to The Fifth Element, writer/director Luc Besson has created some of the toughest, most memorable female action heroes in cinematic history.

Now, Besson directs Scarlett Johansson in LUCY, an action-thriller that tracks a woman accidentally caught in a dark deal who turns the tables on her captors and transforms into a merciless warrior evolved beyond human logic.

LUCY also stars Academy Award winner Morgan Freeman and is produced by Virginie Besson-Silla for EuropaCorp. Universal Pictures will distribute the movie worldwide, except for France, Benelux and China.

http://lucymovie.com/
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CHEF – The Review

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This new release about a highly successful artist returning to his more modest roots in order to re-ignite his passion for his craft could not only apply to the main title character, but to the man who plays him on-screen (who’s also the screenwriter, co-producer, and director). Over the past 20 years Jon Favreau’s had quite an interesting Hollywood career. The then struggling young actor channeled his career frustrations (and the night life exploits of his posse’) into a screenplay that became the low-budget indie hit of 1996 SWINGERS. From there he called the shots behind the camera on the equally independent MADE and soon graduated to bigger studio fare, the holiday-themed smash ELF and the kiddie SF tale ZATHURA: A SPACE ADVENTURE. Then came the man in gold and red. Favreau helmed the initial entry from Marvel Studios, IRON MAN and its sequel, which were box office behemoths. But his next studio foray, COWBOYS & ALIENS, sent his film making career crashing back to Earth. Now Favreau is back, after a few acting gigs, with a small character study that may connect with audiences more than wranglers ropin’ flying saucers. Just a word of warning: grab a bite to eat before you hit the theatre!

The chef of the film’s title is Carl Casper (Favreau), former culinary golden boy of Miami Beach, now running the kitchen of a trendy eatery in LA’s classy Brentwood area. When we meet Carl, he’s trying to ready his staff, overseen by his right hand men Martin (John Legizamo) and Tony (Bobby Cannavale) and hostess/girlfriend Molly (Scarlett Johannson), for a visit from restaurant critic/blogger Ramsey Michel (Oliver Platt) all while juggling some quality time with his ten year-old son Percy (Emjay Anthony) who lives with Carl’s ex-wife, business whiz Inez (Sofia Vergara). As the Dinner hour nears, Carl’s boss Riva (Dustin Hoffman) will not allow him to change the menu. That night Ramsey blasts the restaurant, particularly Carl, for playing it safe by serving the same items from a previous visit. With the help of Percy, Carl gets into an online war with the critic and sets up another re-do Dinner. But when the restaurant fills up, thanks to the internet chatter, Riva insists on the exact same entrees. Carl quits and later verbally assaults Ramsey (as all the patrons’ cellular devices record away). Luckily Inez has a plan: Carl will accompany her on a business trip to Miami as a nanny for Percy. The old haunts energize Carl, and with the help of Inez and another ex-hubby, he decides to put together a food truck, with the help of his young son and Martin. The three soon embark on a road trip adventure that will take them back to the West Coast as Carl’s career takes a new, exciting, risky turn.

For the last decade or so Favreau has been acting in supporting roles as he began concentrating on his behind the camera work. Here he’s back front and center as the lead and he displays much of the everyman, “working average Joe” charm he projected in SWINGERS and MADE that prodded audiences to root for his character. Carl’s a mellow, good guy who also has an artist’s passion as seen in the big verbal smack-down with his critical nemesis. . But the big bear of a man has a true tender side particularly in his scenes with his boy. Emjay Anthony is a sleepy-eyed mop-topped charmer who embodies a son at that short period right before the rebellious teen years. He wants to contact with Dad more than anything, although he’s still got a bit of the brat in him as when he becomes frustrated at cleaning the filthy food truck. Legizamo takes on the role of motor-mouthed wiseguy sidekick that Vince Vaughn assumed in those early films. He’ll bust your chops, but you couldn’t ask for a better guy beside you on the food line. Throw in the delightful Cannavale and the film has a great kitchen comedy trifecta. Just a few weeks ago FADING GIGOLO showed us the subdued side of the voluptuous Ms. Vergara and here we get to see a bit more, along with a ton of tenderness. Has there ever been a movie ex-wife as caring and encouraging as her Inez? There’s no bitterness or spite as she knows that her son should really get time with his Pop. We can’t help wonder what may have split them up in the recent past. Platt and Johansson has great moments on screen, as does Hoffman as the older, but not wiser, money man who will not budge from the tried and true. But the big scene stealer is Robert Downey, Jr. as Inez’s first husband Marvin who sets Carl up with the dirty, dilapidated mobile eatery. The sequence of Carl conversing with Marv in his too-plush office (shoe baggies, please!) may be the movie’s highlight. How about a buddy road-trip with those fellas?

Actually that might offer up many more laughs than the trip that comprises the film’s third act. It’s in these travelogue-like sequences (Nola! Austin!) when the film stumbles and becomes a tad repetitive. They arrive, take in some local color, cook for long lines of appreciative diners, count the cash, and relax to some local musicians. But this doesn’t take away from the entertaining first two acts. The restaurant politics and hierarchy is compelling and very funny as all scurry about like nervy thespians about to perform a new play (well, in a way…). The story crashes into a few comic clichés concerning technology and social media. Daddy Carl bumbles and stumbles on the internet while his boy is almost a computer savant with a mastery of all software and web graphics (showing outgoing tweets as animated bluebirds is a bit cutesy). This won’t matter to diehard “foodies” out there because this film is some mighty tasty “food porn” ranking right up there with BIG NIGHT and DINNER RUSH. At times you’ll wish you could reach up to the screen and yank off a tender morsel of the delicacies (3D would make it too tempting). Carl’s not an eloquent man, but he enjoys expressing his affection by using his culinary skills whether it’s whipping up some late night pasta for Molly or toasting an impossibly delicious grilled cheese sandwich for Percy’s lunch (yeah, it’s just a grilled cheese, but it’ll make your mouth water!). Favreau has proved himself adept at blockbusters, but he’s not lost his touch with smaller, more personal stories. Like Carl, he’s proven that he doesn’t need the fancy bells and whistles (like a trendy LA bistro), he just needs the basics, with a touch of heat and spice. Overall CHEF is a pretty solid satisfying movie meal. Now, I wonder what’s in the fridge…

3.5 Out of 5

 

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Win Tickets To The Advance Screening Of CHEF In St. Louis

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Chef Carl Casper (Jon Favreau) suddenly quits his job at a prominent Los Angeles restaurant after refusing to compromise his creative integrity for its controlling owner (Dustin Hoffman), he is left to figure out what’s next.

Finding himself in Miami, he teams up with his ex-wife (Sofia Vergara), his friend (John Leguizamo) and his son to launch a food truck. Taking to the road, Chef Carl goes back to his roots to reignite his passion for the kitchen — and zest for life and love.

CHEF opens in St. Louis, Friday, May 23rd.

Check out some of these scrumptious recipes.

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WAMG invites you to enter for the chance to win a pass (good for 2) to the advance screening of CHEF on Thursday, May 22nd at 7PM in the St. Louis area

In our comments section below, tell us your favorite recipe along with the ingredients and instructions. If you are a winner, we will contact you via email.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

R for language, including some suggestive references

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UNDER THE SKIN – The Review

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So this weekend we’ve seen Jude Law take a walk on the wild side in the title role of DOM HEMINGWAY. Now, we also get a new film starring a stateside screen beauty, Scarlett Johansson as she takes a walk on the weird side. Very weird. She stars in almost every minute of  UNDER THE SKIN from director Jonathon Glazer who gave us the enormously entertaining SEXY BEAST (Ben Kingley’s character might have been “mates” with Dom!). But SKIN is no look at the cockney criminal class. This film is based on a 2000 science fiction novel from Michel Faber. Now we’re used to seeing Ms. J dashing about in CG backdrops in big budget blockbusters like Michael Bay’s THE ISLAND  and over at Marvel Studios as the sublime SHIELD agent the Black Widow in, so far, three epics. But this film’s not in the same arena as those since there’s just a couple of brief effects shots and its budget would barely cover the catering of the current Captain America box office king in which she co-stars. It seems though that SKIN is getting some attention because we’re seeing (ahem) another side of the lauded, glamorous star (got your attention now?). Look, she’s pulling up in the van. Let’s hop in for a very dark, strange trip.

UNDER opens next to a deserted road on a dark night in rural Scotland. A motorcyclist parks his bike, walks down an embankment, and returns seconds later with a young unconscious woman slung over his shoulder. Next we’re in a room filled with bright white light, actually there’s nothing there but the light.  Except at its center is the sleeping (or is she deceased?) woman. Entering from the right is a nude woman (Johansson) who proceeds to strip the clothing from said prone woman (there, you didn’t have to wait too long!). The now dressed brunette hops behind the wheel of a van and begins her endless cruise through the Scottish neighborhoods and streets. She approaches men walking along the streets to ask for directions, and then offers them a ride. The woman immediately peppers them with questions (“Got a girlfriend?”,”A family?”, “Live around here?”). If they’re unattached loners, she takes them to the back of a nondescript cottage. She leaves the vehicle, walks to the door, and beckons her passenger to follow her inside. This time the interior is pitch black save for her as she walks ahead while peeling off clothing. The men follow behind and disrobe, but the floor she has just strode across sucks them down like a pool or a bog. Once the men are swallowed up, they never resurface. The film follows her as she observes humanity and seeks new victims until she pick up a man with a facial deformity. This encounter sends her on a different path while the motorcyclist attempts to find her. The woman now appears to be trying to adapt to humanity instead of preying on it.

So Johansson here is doing the old “fish out of water” character, the alien who can observe the oddness of us. She’s not ET or STARMAN , but more like “the vamp who fell to Earth”. With her black, frizzy mop-like hair she resembles a cross between Maria Schnieder from LAST TANGO IN PARIS and Fleischer cartoon icon Betty Boop. Much has been made of the improvisational nature of her pick-up scenes. Hidden cameras were placed around the interior of the vehicle as she conversed with locals (the men were told after the filming and, I assume, signed releases). Most of the conversations are head-scratchers. While SJ speaks with a light British lilt (like a Dinner theatre Eliza Doolittle), her passengers’ Scottish chatter is almost indecipherable (I was yearning for subtitles). These driving scenes just go on and on with the monotony broken up by the two or three striptease/drownings. Are these fellows food for her and “motorcycle guy”? A power source, since she never seems to stop for “petrol”? When she’s out of the van, the scenes have little payoff. She observes a beach tragedy, joins a rowdy bachelorette party, shops at a mall, and stumbles while walking down a city street (no doubt another hidden camera bit). Her encounter with a young man living with neurofibromatosis (I was reminded of Lon Chaney Jr. in THE HAUNTED PALACE) seems exploitive, there just to shock us out of the stupor the film’s pace has produced. She gives up the auto for the film’s lengthy last act and trudges through a forest preserve for what feels like an entire rainy season (most of the film has a cold, overcast grey-gloom). In the last moments there’s a clever bit of special effects magic, but the finale’ makes as little sense as the rest of the nearly two-hour tedious trudge (not helped by a ‘tinny’ two or three note music score). You’re left to wonder what Johansson saw in this. Perhaps the role was an acting challenge or perhaps she felt a need for some “indie cred” after so many studio films (she does have a role in the third biggest box office hit of ALL time!). Some adventurous audiences may enjoy the modern gothic feel and the improved dialogue scenes, but for those of us who appreciate coherent plotting, consistant pacing, and compelling characters…well, we’re just stuck out in the constant chilly drizzle along with those duped Scotts. The “artsy-schmartsey” vibe acts like quicksand on the story and actors. Now, is there any news about that proposed Black Widow solo feature?

1.5 out of 5

UNDER THE SKIN opens everywhere and plays exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Tivoli Theatre

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