So, back at home after The Menu - I made myself a Christmas dinner: A grilled cheese sandwich. Frustratingly, I had to carefully pick through the now mostly moldy cheese, the result of my power being out for a day and a half and the fridge turning into Bacteria Central. I retired early to bed to watch another movie, and what comes up as the first suggestion? The Danish film, A Taste of Hunger (Smagen af sult), starring the vastly underrated Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and the beautiful Katrine Greis-Rosenthal.
Coster-Waldau plays Carsten, a brilliant Copenhagen chef hellbent on earning - for himself, but also his equally obsessed wife - a Michelin star. The story move back and forth in time showing the relationship, marital problems, difficulties of family life, and the price we pay, sometimes unknowingly, to achieve a dream at whatever cost necessary.
It was difficult not to compare, if not the two movies themselves, which are polar opposites, then the creative processes of the two very different chefs, carefully and with great skill finding the right balances in flavors, salt, sweet, texture, color, etc. for the near perfect dishes they create. One element goes out of whack, the whole thing fails. It's also an allegory for Carsten's life, but just subtle enough not to be beating you over the head with it.
Greis-Rosenthal is Maggi, equal parts wife, mother and muse, but she comes with her own baggage, and while Carsten is noticeably obsessed with their success, it is her obsession as well as her actions that brings about the imbalance in their lives and puts the dream at risk.
Coster-Waldau makes it hard not to root for Carsten, and one forgives his mildly single-focus with the dream as he tries to balance everything, marital life, being a good dad, and winning that star. His confidence is born from Maggi's belief in him more than almost any other element. While he comes off fiercely proud, holding himself up as a pillar of strength, that, of course cannot last and when we see things cracking, and Carsten is at his most vulnerable, it is painful to watch.
Katrine Greis-Rosenthal's Maggi is even more complicated . . . and even though nothing like her, I thought of Tennessee Williams' character description of "Maggie the Cat" from Cat On A Hot Tin Roof. She is desperate, loving, but needy and in her own way, the most selfish character in this story. Well, not she isn't, actually. That distinction belongs to Carsten's younger brother, Frederik, played well, but annoyingly, and made unlikeable by Charlie Gustafsson.
The middle of the film bogs down a bit with director Christofer Boe and co-writer Tobias Lindholm's script on the fringe of turning an intriguing story into a soap opera, but Boe's direction - here at least - is better than his writing, and he steers the film back on path. If the end is a little predictable (and it halfway is) it's also inherent and necessary to the redemption of these characters we've grown fascinated by. Or at least who fascinated me.
Interestingly, both The Menu and A Taste of Hunger - delve into the almost ridiculously over-the-top worlds of cuisine that is too fancy for its own good - with each film featuring an important element of food foreign to its world. In the former, it is a cheeseburger, while in the latter, it is a hot dog. Seems about right.
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