I liked the way this film had a gripping storyline and also the way the food was presented well. It has a really great start, and continues well for a long while. The issue I had with it, like you, is that it began to present the world as black and white, when really it is grey.
The ending looked like one of those Scooby Doo endings where the villain would go, "I would have had my way, if not for you meddling teenagers." And it is really applicable in reality because "antagonist" wasn't exactly evil. He was just playing the game by its rules—and that's life.
The film made it seem like people in poverty are all good people and people in wealth are bad. Chef Paul, to me, is an example of the life of successful people today. They are determined and they are willing to make sacrifices. That's the real world.
Exactly. I'm glad we agree on that, for a moment I thought my perception might be wrong.
Chef Paul is an example of how anger can be used in a motivational way and he became a successful person, he is rude to his employees, but he assures them of a good job and he is at the top of his career as a chef, the rich pay him a lot of money. He gives them a product they crave to eat. He does nothing wrong.
I also liked the way the food was presented, beautiful scenes, the whole conflict with Aoy I also liked, but his ending part ruins the story. Yes, it also looks like a scooby doo ending hahaha for me it was very similar to Latin American soap operas.😆
I wasn't completely satisfied, but anyway, I recommend it to anyone who hasn't seen it.
Thanks for stopping by and commenting 😊
It's a film I'll recommend to anyone still, regardless of its lapses.
I'll write my review soon enough, and I'll share my thoughts too. I often feel my perceptions are wrong too...haha. I just try.