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Babette's Feast
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Directed by Gabriel Axel
The Danish/French Babette's Feast is based on a story by Isak Dinesen, also the source of the very different Out of Africa (1985). Stephane Audran plays Babette, a 19th century Parisian political refugee who seeks shelter in a rough Danish coastal town. Philippa (Bodil Kjer) and Martina (Birgitte Federspiel), the elderly daughters of the town's long-dead minister, take Babette in. As revealed in flashback, Philippa and Martina were once beautiful young women (played by Hanne Stensgaard and Vibeke Hastrup), who'd forsaken their chances at romance and fame, taking hollow refuge in religion. Babette holds a secret that may very well allow the older ladies to have a second chance at life. This is one of the great movies about food, but there are way too many surprises in Babette's Feast to allow us to reveal anything else at this point (except that Ingmar Bergman "regulars" Bibi Andersson and Jarl Kulle have significant cameo roles).. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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tlemustlemus What a banquet!
by tlemus in tlemus Blog
loved it.
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"There are certain things that really compel me to see a movie. On the top five is food. So this was certainly a banquet for the eyes. It certainly transports you into the calm and peaceful lives of this little Danish town inhabitants. Many times we see these portrayals as exhaustingly ordinary. But you see how through Babette's eyes this was salvation. She touched their lives through her art, but it was she the one that was able to grab this coastal town as her lifesaver. " [More]
nosnittapnosnittap Ministers and Turtles
by nosnittap in nosnittap Blog
loved it.
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"Delicate, subtle and beautiful film-making. The cultural interaction is handled with grace throughout as are the food preparation scenes. This is a superb simple film. " [More]
unclefesteringunclefestering Re:Weekly Theme for July 7: Foo ...
by unclefestering in Weekly Theme
"[quote user="indieabby88"] Man, forget "No Reservations." Check out the German movie it's based on, "Mostly Martha." I didn't even bother seeing the Americanized version. It looked really sugar-coated. [/quote] I agree completely with you about this. If we are talking ultimate feast " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
The sophisticated and subtle screenplay for Babette's Feast, adapted by director Gabriel Axel, is based on a story written by Isak Dinesen, the writer memorably played by Meryl Streep in the biopic Out of Africa. In the film's first half, the emotional detachment of the pious characters is mirrored in the directorial approach, which allows the narrator to explain the matters before us, keeping us at a distance. When the feast begins, the narrator steps aside, Axel's direction becomes more evocative, and our participation becomes more active. Axel plays things low-key: his camera doesn't swoop or dance, but lingers lovingly over every aspect of the meal. The soundtrack includes some beautiful period music, but Axel mostly allows the sounds of the meal to become the symphony of the feast. Made out of humility and love, the feast is Babette's supreme artistic expression, and her hedonistic present encourages the feasters to look a little more closely at their own lives, as the magical and voluptuous feast dramatically counterpoints their puritanical existence. Babette's offering is a ritual sacrifice, intended to encourage the austere characters with the possibility that their material nourishment may provide spiritual sustenance as well. The film also contains a cultural context, as the political revolutions in 19th century Europe lead to Babette's displacement and the resultant cultural blending of Babette's southern European Catholic sensuality with sober northern European Protestantism. Their pact, to say nothing about the magnificence of the feast, ironically reveals the ineffable truth that Babette's artistic expression of love cannot be properly praised with words. Like the guests' spiritual values, it exists on a higher plane, where simple acts of generosity can erase personal prejudices. The film leaves us with a haunting echo of the roads not taken, as the characters must ponder the paths they have chosen and ask themselves: have they made the most of their gifts? Babette's Feast won several major awards, including the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film and the British BAFTA Award for Best Film of 1987. ~ Dan Jardine, All Movie Guide
 

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