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No Reservations

Rated - 3.5 stars

No Reservations

If you can't stand the heat, stay out of the cinema! Kitchen movies are quite the fad right now, what with Waitress on release, and Pixar's Ratatouille at your local car boot(-leg) sale. A remake of the well-liked German film Mostly Martha, No Reservations is a polished, upscale Hollywood romance. The menu may be somewhat predictable, but the presentation is clean, the flavours are simple but sweet, and it has a nice, light texture.

Catherine Zeta Jones is Kate, chef at 22 Bleeker Street, a trendy Manhattan restaurant. She's queen of her kitchen, but aside from the two blocks between her apartment and the restaurant, there's nothing else in her life. At her boss's insistence she sees a therapist (Bob Balaban), but she controls him with her cooking just like everybody else.

Still, some things in life cannot be controlled. When Kate's sister dies in a car accident, there is no-one else to care for her nine-year-old niece, Zoe (Abigail Breslin). Kate's work hours are hardly conducive to good parenting but she's ready to give it her best. Meanwhile her boss hires a new sous chef to ease the load. Nick (Aaron Eckhart) is something else: relaxed and playful where Kate is disciplined and uptight.

No Reservations

Eckhart gets a great intro, wearing Crocs, belting out grand opera as he works. Zeta-Jones merely has to hoist a frosty eyebrow and you can set your watch by the hour of screen time it will take for her to melt into his arms. You can tell this is a 'women's picture' (Mostly Martha was written and directed by Sandra Nettelbeck) by the fact that Nick's best assets are the comfortable friendship he strikes up with the child, and of course his cooking. It probably doesn't hurt that he's also good looking, modest and charming.

I recall interviewing director Scott Hicks about his film Snow Falling On Cedars. I told him how much I loved the cinematography and his face fell. 'That means you didn't like the movie, right?' It was an awkward moment. He was absolutely right. The film's stunning imagery couldn't cover for its turgid storytelling.

Well, I loved the photography in No Reservations too. But DP Stuart Dryburgh (The Piano; The Portrait of a Lady) doesn't gloss the material; he gets in close and relies on natural light; I doubt Zeta-Jones has ever been filmed this way before, but it's not like she needs pancake and filters to stop the traffic. These characters don't have the complexity of real people, but Dryburgh helps us to believe that they could be. With her pale complexion and anxious eyes, Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine) is so far from cute she gives the romance an altogether harsher grounding; Dryburgh might have taken her for his cue.

No Reservations

Apparently Zeta-Jones can't fry an egg in reality, and she doesn't have the scarred hands and forearms you find on most professional chefs, but Hicks and screenwriter Carole Fuchs get points for making food such an essential part of how people relate to each other in this milieu.

It would be foolish not to voice any reservations about No Reservations - and I'm willing to believe that Mostly Martha is a more raw and rewarding experience (I missed it). All the same, having gone in with low expectations I must say I was won over by its simple compassion and understated craftsmanship.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 2 
	  stars out of 5 Anna Smith, Time Out

A control-freak chef is forced to embrace chaos in this romantic comedy-drama based on the German hit Mostly... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsReserve your copy...

PaulaWestwood from Ashton-Under-Lyne [Highly rated reviewer] , 28/08/2007

What do we have on the menu here ? A good scoop of the notorious rivalry between chefs, a large helping of romance, add a cool young kid for good measure, and mix it all up. Though it might not be the most stunningly original story to hit the big screen, it should definately make it onto your main order. This an excellent feel good, mostly fluffy, film about breaking down barriers. Young 11 year old Abigail Breslin is brilliant as Zoe, and the whole thing just works for me.

So can you after all share a kitchen, and share a life, watch it and find out. A definate recommended watch.

  54 out of 71 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsexcellent entertaining movie

lulz from London [Highly rated reviewer] , 17/12/2007

to those who like to cook, or who are simply wanting to be entertained by a little romance movie,

this movie is cute, witty, and not at all a cheesy hollywood one!

The cast is absolutely great, there is a great balance between realism, romance and expectations,

I can only recommend this film.

  15 out of 15 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starssuperb...............................

williamsgwynfa [Highly rated reviewer] , 08/06/2008

this film is superb. A master chef called Kate (played by Catherine Zeta-Jones) lives her life like she runs the kitchen, with a no-nonsense intensity that both captivates and intimidates everyone around her.

With breathtaking precision, she powers through each hectic shift, coordinating hundreds of meals, preparing delicate sauces, seasoning and simmering each dish to absolute perfection.

However Kate is at her happiest behind the scenes, she only leaves her kitchen to accept compliments for one of her signature dishes, or, on rare occasions, to tangle with a customer who dares question her expertise.

Kate's perfectionist nature is put to the test when a brash new sous-chef joins her staff, the high-spirited and freewheeling Nick (played by Aaron Eckhart). A rising culinary star himself, Nick favours opera while working and loves to make everyone around him laugh.

Kate find's Nick difficult to deal with, and is also struggling to connect with her nine-year-old niece, Zoe (played by Abigail Breslin), who has recenty, and very unexpectedly come to live with her.

Zoe is clearly out of place in Kate's routine, but Kate is determined to make a home for her... just as soon as she figures out how too.

As time goes on, Kate is not sure what irritates her more. Whether it is Nick's talent, that is impressing Paula, the owner of the restaurant and the clientele, or that his easygoing charm, quickly wins over the shy Zoe, who finds it easier to open up to him than to her aunt.

What will Kate do?.....Watch this fantastic film to find our!!!!!!!

  14 out of 14 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 0 starsRubbish - See the original

A customer from London , 05/11/2007

This American version of Mostly Martha is not only disappointing; it is painful to sit through. It is embarassing to watch Zeta Jones walk in the shadow of a great performance and not even that well. Every moment and gesture is literally copied from the original. What made Martina Gedeck's performance so touching was the balance between a remote, stressed out, highly rated chef and a woman trying to reach out to her niece. Eckhart at least brought some flair to the role that was fresh, though still not up to par with the brillianc eof Sergio Castellito.

And like too many American films, saccharine moments were added and the end was changed to something more convenient.

  12 out of 12 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 1 starboring

A customer from Enfield , 03/03/2008

Only watch this film if you have a death wish - BOREDOM KILLS.

  5 out of 5 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 3 starsGood, but not the best of Catherine

A customer from Wales , 30/10/2007

I think was good but not the best I have seen with Catherine Zeta.

Quite romantic but really nothing charming.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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