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Ratatouille
Serves Up a Deliciously Good Time
By Orson Scott Card
The promos for Ratatouille
looked funny and cute, and it was from Pixar, which has a record
of making even dumb film ideas into wonderful movies. For instance,
The Incredibles actually did a better job of the multiple-superhero
movie than the supposedly much-more-serious League of Extraordinary
Gentlemen and Fantastic Four.
But at the same time ... really,
folks, a rat that cooks haute cuisine in a French restaurant?
Comedy only works if you care. How are they going to make me care
about a rat that for some absurd reason has a yen to be a chef?
Here’s the miracle: It not
only works, it works brilliantly. It’s funny all the way
through — I joined the whole audience in laughing aloud
at bit after bit. But it’s also delightfully emotional.
I actually found myself caring, about the rat and even more about
the charmingly inept would-be chef named Linguini.
The animation is extraordinarily
expressive — while there are famous actors playing some
parts, nobody was cast for star power. Instead, they were cast
because they were exactly right for the part.
Janeane Garofalo, for instance, is
marvelous as the hard-as-nails female chef who is ordered to take
Linguini under her wing and train him. Ian Holm is great as Skinner,
and Peter O’Toole absolutely rocks as the ice-hearted food
critic Anton Ego.
The movie not only tells a funny,
heartwarming story that makes you cheer at the sight of a kitchen
full of rats, it also manages to be smart about the relationship
between critics and artists of any kind.
At the end of the movie, you don’t
really believe in Chef Gusteau’s slogan that “anybody
can cook.” But you do gain a much greater appreciation for
those who do it well.
This article first appeared in The Rhinoceros Times of
Greensboro, North Carolina, and is used here by permission.
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