Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts

Monday, May 17, 2010

The Scent of Green Papaya

It’s been a long time ago since I saw the Oscar-nominated & Cannes prize-winning) film The Scent of Green Papaya (L'Odeur de la Papaye Verte, 1993) in the theater. So, I’m glad I caught it again a while ago. It’s directed by Anh-Hung Tran and stars his wife Yen-Khe Tran Nu. The plot revolves about a young peasant girl, Mui, who is hired as a servant in a shopkeeper’s family in Saigon. We’re made clear that it’s 1951, i.e., time of the First Indochina War – and throughout we hear sirens announcing the curfew and airplanes flying overhead. Mui performs her chores diligently and obediently; she’s inquisitive, taking in everything around her – the sounds of birds and insects, the music made around the house, the smell of food and the scent of the green papaya growing on the tree in the courtyard; she keeps two crickets in a little bamboo cage as pets; and she silently endures continuous taunts by the family’s youngest son. On the surface, the story is tranquil, scenes take their time, the camera lingers on plants, fruits and leaves, insects, toads and birds. The first half hour is merely introductory, getting to know who’s who.

But the tension and violence that we hear in the air also makes its way into the home. The boys torture ants and lizards; the grand-mother continually prays in mourning for the loss of her husband and her granddaughter (who would have been Mui’s age); the father has a habit of leaving without a trace for days or weeks, taking with him the family money; the mother tells Mui she is like a daughter to her (yet keeps her as a servant). Then the husband is found dead. Gradually the mother has to sell more and more possessions as they cannot make sufficient money selling cloth at the shop on the street side of the house. Women in this film suffer in silence. The music is incredible, it’s often hard to tell if we are listening to someone playing around the house or if it’s the supporting soundtrack; sometimes cellos mimic the planes in the air, or violins imitate the curfew sirens. And so the silent tranquility interweaves with the violent undercurrent within the family and outside in Vietnam.

Ten years later, 1961, Mui (now 20) is sent to work for a family friend as they can no longer support her. Mui has admired him all these years. He’s a trained pianist and about to be engaged to a woman who’s the only modern individual in the story: she a frivolous trollop; not much of a poster-girl for liberated Vietnamese women. Soon the man is drawn to Mui, breaks off with his fiancée and begins a relationship with Mui. He teaches her to read and write, and soon Mui is pregnant with child. To me, the ending is as abrupt as it’s unsatisfying... It’s almost tagged on as an afterthought. The romanticized view of women sympathizes with their silent suffering, but the only alternative, a Westernized modern woman, flutters by like a pesky nuisance. Men are even more distant and one-dimensional. We never learn why the father kept leaving home with all the money, his sons just pass by, torturing insects or bothering Mui, and the man Mui eventually marries (well, I’m assuming the marry) remains a mystery: we only know that he plays piano handsomely. So we are left wondering what drew them together, other than that they are painfully attractive and charming. Despite all these complaints, I honestly think this is well worth your trouble watching.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Eat Drink Man Woman

I found that a much more interesting movie than The Cook, the Thief, His Wife and Her Lover, is Ang Lee’s Eat Drink Man Woman (1994). Of course, of course, attractive Taiwanese women ... I get it! But that’s not the sole or even primary reason. This movie is charming because of the simple yet effective story of a father, his three daughters, and their relationship with, and through, food. The father is a semi-retired master chef, who lost his wife sixteen years ago. His oldest daughter is a high school teacher who spent the past nine years nursing a broken heart. The middle daughter is a successful business woman who recently bought an apartment and then got offered a job in Amsterdam. The youngest of the three is a twenty-year old working the counter at Wendy’s. At the beginning of the story all three women still live at home, complaining about their father’s elaborate Sunday dinner banquets as if it’s a form of torture. First the youngest suddenly finds a boyfriend, gets pregnant, marries and moves out. Soon the eldest follows, finding a man to marry and move in with. The middle daughter considers staying at home to care for their father. But then things take an unexpected turn. And with such a beautifully simple story, and wonderful acting, you get a remarkably satisfying movie experience!

Sunday, May 2, 2010

The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover

A movie I have been meaning to see for twenty years, but never got ‘round to, because I always forgot and didn’t really know what it was about ... is Peter Greenaway’s 1989 film The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (resp. played by Richard Bohringer, Michael Gambon, Helen Mirren and Alan Howard). Visually, the movie is a lavish and grand spectacle: the cinematography, the sets, the décor, the food displays, and the costumes designed by Jean-Paul Gaultier. (Every set has its own color, and costumes change in color along with the sets: blue outside, green in the kitchen, red in the restaurant, white in the restroom, brown in the bookshop.) I cannot say I’m a big fan of the score composed by Michael Nyman... It’s all very theatrical and formalist, but tedious as a result. Most annoying is the titular thief who has a violent oral fixation of Freudian proportions and who just keeps jabbering on and on about how brilliant he is, and how stupid everybody else is. It’s already terribly annoying after five minutes, but alas we have to endure his boorish bawls throughout ... practically on end... You can essentially guess the plot just from the title: the wife of a thief is having an affair in the cook’s restaurant, and then the thief finds out... Food, sex, and violence; life, love, and death... Hmmm... what was all the fuss about? Pray tell.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Delicatessen

Watching Man Bites Dog the other day made me realize that I’ve been meaning to check out Delicatessen for a while ... and then wondered if I had seen it before ... it all seemed so familiar... (Did I really see it before?) The setting is some post-apocalyptic France seemingly circa 1950, with much if not all of civilization, politics and economy burned to cinders. The plot centers on an apartment building run by the local butcher. I don’t think I’m giving anything away when I add that most animals have become extinct due to hunting, and that therefore the butcher doesn’t trade in animal meat, if you know what I mean... The best-known sequence is also the funniest, in which we see and especially hear tenants in the building play cello along a metronome, pump a bicycle wheel, beat a carpet, paint the ceiling, knit, drill holes in those little animal-call boxes, all in the rhythm set by the landlord making love to his mistress atop the squeaking bedsprings... Hahahaha! Definitely worth watching if you care for dark humor, but you have to be in the mood for weirdness... (And I haven’t even mentioned the Troglodists!)