The Menu Explained | What the Cheeseburger Really Means

2023 ж. 18 Қаң.
4 211 624 Рет қаралды

The Menu Explained that Chef Julian Slowik is an exploited artist at the whim of a shallow elite. Tyler, Lillian, Ted & Co. all use Slowik's art for their own gain, and are duly punished for it. But Margot is not like the others. Armed with a simple cheeseburger order, she is able to bring joy back to the jaded cook and win her freedom. In this video, I explain how a humble cheeseburger can be so powerful.
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  • When she took a bite from the cheeseburger, it represented her eating a cheeseburger. Truly one of the greatest representations of all time.

    @benedictsmith9112@benedictsmith9112 Жыл бұрын
    • But it was Jennifer Lawrence the first woman to ever eat a cheeseburger.

      @Ronkyort0dox@Ronkyort0dox Жыл бұрын
    • @@Ronkyort0dox what the fuck does that mean, Kobe Bryant.

      @godson8817@godson8817 Жыл бұрын
    • It's a Morbius meme

      @AC-iz7eh@AC-iz7eh Жыл бұрын
    • top 10 anime moments fr

      @KAINOA104@KAINOA104 Жыл бұрын
    • @@AC-iz7eh I loved it when Morbius said "Morbing with a cheese of burgers" and menued all over Jeniffer Lawrence.

      @adrianopandolfo@adrianopandolfo Жыл бұрын
  • That 10 dollar she gave him at the end, probably meant more to him than the thousands of dollars he got from each of the other customers. She showed genuine appreciation for his food and service. No buttery statements, nor long-winded critiques of his food, all she said was "now that's a burger" and they had that look of mutual understanding and appreciation. Edit: I rewatched it and a subtle detail is that the Chef uses a handkerchief to prevent his hand from being burned while making Margot's burger, but during that rest of the film, he was super detached and even actively put his hand on the candle flame without fear nor reaction. In that moment of cooking a simple burger, he's human again and can feel- instead of being a soulless, overlooked robot he has been while having to serve these rich, snobbish customers

    @procastination_is_my_passi4182@procastination_is_my_passi41829 ай бұрын
    • damn i missed that detail about the handkerchief, thats actually genius!

      @x340x@x340x9 ай бұрын
    • @@x340x It's so simple and yet so effective! It's also the one time we see the Chef actually cooking and smiling in the kitchen :')

      @procastination_is_my_passi4182@procastination_is_my_passi41829 ай бұрын
    • I notice it and taught he really likes to make burgers eh 😆

      @bdpv025@bdpv0258 ай бұрын
    • Also, it would’ve been unsanitary too.

      @iGottaGoodiDea@iGottaGoodiDea7 ай бұрын
    • Basically put more care for the cheeseburger huh? His "real" final dish

      @hafirenggayuda@hafirenggayuda7 ай бұрын
  • The subtle smile while he cooked the burger was a joyous sense for that he was making an item so simple yet the simplicity of it took him back to his Joy for cooking

    @beardedbatman822@beardedbatman822 Жыл бұрын
    • they went to the ratatouille moment, but for the chef instead of the critic

      @yeeaahhzz@yeeaahhzz Жыл бұрын
    • Remind of italian cuisine, maximum satisfaction with minimum effort. Most of the flavor and taste come from the quality of raw ingredients. It's nice to oppose at french cuisine where sophistication are stacked above each other

      @tomzeru@tomzeru Жыл бұрын
    • ​​@@yeeaahhzz that's exactly what I thought about, she reverse ratatoiulled him

      @hermiona1147@hermiona1147 Жыл бұрын
    • I was gonna say, the way he acted the joy in doing something simple that you used to once do was immaculate just by that facial expression

      @rotom18@rotom1810 ай бұрын
    • This was a bad movie the plot was stupid

      @dontrah1838@dontrah18385 ай бұрын
  • When I first heard her order a cheeseburger I recognized it was because that is what Slowik used to cook. But I, mistakenly, thought it was an attempt to humiliate him, because he is overqualified to prepare a cheeseburger. But now I get that it was actually an act of compassion, she gave him a true moment of joy and desire to cook, which is even more impressive when you take into account the fact that he is a monster. I like the message that she was allowed to leave because she showed compassion, and I believe that this is a lesson on forgiveness and empathy, and it was the lack of this essential human emotions in the "takers" and the chef, that led to their death.

    @oscarv6907@oscarv6907 Жыл бұрын
    • People who arent detail driven would miss it. It held on to the shot though for a whilllle

      @thepaesesai@thepaesesai Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah that was my first thought too, thinking she's trying to humiliate him or trick him by ordering that cheeseburger

      @clark5426@clark542611 ай бұрын
    • I think you are forgetting one thing. Margot is a prostitute; she sells an illusionary connection to people. She doesn't REALLY want a cheeseburger, rather she knows her mark and how to get what she wants from him (usually money but tonight, her freedom). While it never MEANS ANYTHING to Margot, she leaves another man satisfied and happy. When she bites into the cheeseburger on the shoreline, she demonstrates that she is a taker as well just like the other prostitutes back on the island.

      @michaels7134@michaels713411 ай бұрын
    • Spoken like a true insane person who thinks way to hard about a bad movie

      @StarLight-lt2tm@StarLight-lt2tm11 ай бұрын
    • She did manipulate him. And he knew it and let her do it. She solved his problem of what to do with her

      @lawton6123@lawton612310 ай бұрын
  • Also a small detail is that all the food was cooked by the line cooks, the cheeseburger was the only food Slowik cooked himself

    @nvrmnd4567@nvrmnd4567 Жыл бұрын
    • Almost as if he can only cook burgers... 😂

      @misamisamisamisa@misamisamisamisa Жыл бұрын
    • The last three words disprove your comment XD (well, if you're a cannibal)

      @cc8879@cc8879 Жыл бұрын
    • Remember she "read the writing on the wall" about him.

      @kellylozano8899@kellylozano8899 Жыл бұрын
    • @@misamisamisamisa dun dun dun.

      @USA_UNITED1776@USA_UNITED1776 Жыл бұрын
    • If this was a comedy, he would’ve staged this whole thing because he only knows how to make burgers and he was only good at delegating and not cooking

      @themeticulousassassin2632@themeticulousassassin2632 Жыл бұрын
  • Also, Slowik gave Margot bread in the form of the burger bun. Earlier he said none of them deserved bread, and yet, Margot got a bun.

    @Its_Cannon@Its_Cannon Жыл бұрын
    • ah, good observation

      @kanoaikawach@kanoaikawach Жыл бұрын
    • I thought this, but tortilla is bread

      @robinmarriott00@robinmarriott00 Жыл бұрын
    • @@robinmarriott00 The tortillas represented painful memories. The Burger bun cradled the burger, his innocence. The bread she was given was made to be consumed and enjoyed, the tortillas were meant to invoke sorrow and pain.

      @Its_Cannon@Its_Cannon Жыл бұрын
    • Its a cheese burger bro.

      @petergriffinson1907@petergriffinson1907 Жыл бұрын
    • @@robinmarriott00 sir...a tortilla is NOT bread.

      @AlexLopez-hn5ru@AlexLopez-hn5ru Жыл бұрын
  • One detail I absolutely can’t get over. The fact that even though it was going to cost $1250 a person. And when Margot ordered the cheeseburger, she asked how much it would cost and she paid up when it came, she didn’t expect it to be given to her. That right there could’ve been what closed the deal on letting her go, that made Chef realize she wasn’t like the other and she deserved to live. Coming from a server who has worked a variety of restaurants, you come in contact with so many customers who feel so entitled. That when a customer comes around that asks for something but says “I have no problem paying for it”. I’m willing to hook them up and treat them that much better. The people who made this movie knew exactly what they were doing.

    @danielwitt7419@danielwitt7419 Жыл бұрын
    • Pretty cheap for $1,250.

      @JPSimen@JPSimen Жыл бұрын
    • Erin/Margot paid for what she got-$9.95 for a 🍔 & 🍟..she hardly ate any of Chef Julian's food.

      @caronstout354@caronstout354 Жыл бұрын
    • @@caronstout354 She ate more on the boat ride away from the island as she knew she purchased her food near closing time, and thoughfully asked for it to go. Had she finished it there, she also would have been closed on too.

      @JPSimen@JPSimen Жыл бұрын
    • Whether their feeling of entitlement is misplaced depends on the price and your standards. If someone pays a lot that person is entitled to the respective standard. If you get a lot of criticism, perhaps you should raise the standard?

      @wiczus6102@wiczus6102 Жыл бұрын
    • How about the mother of the Chef... i really confused about her appearance in hole movie...

      @HuyNguyen-bd7qj@HuyNguyen-bd7qj Жыл бұрын
  • I worked in a burger joint and it was the job I loved the most. I made peanuts, but when this guy came back with his mom and dad telling them how good the burger I made him was I almost cried. The one job where I got the most honest happy people was that one. Watching happy people eating your food. Hearing genuine thank you. I miss that.

    @Bhethar@Bhethar10 ай бұрын
    • This is the reason why when I go to eat out and the food is genuenly good, I say to an avaibable waiter to say to the chef that the food was delicious, cus If I worked in a kitchen and really tried to make the food good, hearing that would make my day

      @jackmesrel4933@jackmesrel49339 ай бұрын
    • Why I line mom pop shops more than fast food.

      @npcimknot958@npcimknot9583 ай бұрын
    • I don't get it. What kind of burget joint makes peanuts? I'm assuming it was just served as a side dish?

      @leftoids.are.cringe@leftoids.are.cringeАй бұрын
    • @@leftoids.are.cringeI think he meant that his salary was peanuts.

      @azizsafudin@azizsafudinАй бұрын
    • My first job was at a Subway. From there, I worked as a fry cook in a resort restaurant. I worked a year and a half as a cook at McDonald's and then 8 months in a Convenience store deli. I loved flipping burgers and making Meat loaf sandwiches. I still enjoy cooking, but I do it very rarely these days and I can still make a mean sub sandwich.

      @agenttexx@agenttexxАй бұрын
  • To me, the cheeseburger is the antithesis to culinary art, it's greasy and easy and popular. Yet it accomplishes everything a cook should seek to accomplish, it's delicious, it brings happiness, for a while before his death, Slowik isn't a chef serving the elite ideas, he's a cook, making a poor, starving girl some food.

    @riotbreaker3506@riotbreaker3506 Жыл бұрын
    • Idk man culinary art doesn't have to be difficult and hard, art is subjective no matter the medium

      @wingwangtingtang@wingwangtingtang Жыл бұрын
    • @@wingwangtingtang I'm mostly referencing the elitism of art, Slowik was miserable deconstructing the idea of consumption, much like his guests were miserable caught in their own status, cheating, stealing, and lying. For the first time in years, someone wasn't asking him to be the best chef in the world.

      @riotbreaker3506@riotbreaker3506 Жыл бұрын
    • I wonder, as an artist I’m driven to create. I draw from my experiences and translate them so I and others can process them. But in a capitalist society where everything is a commodity the efforts of the creative are subject to the demands of the market that supports it. Many artist become famous for works that were not their favorites. Is this a cautionary tale of compromising your creative soul for financial gain or a tragedy that every thing that is unique and authentic becomes common and counterfeit when commodified. That cheeseburger on the other hand really looked good. Beauty and pleasure should be for everybody elitist and classist needs for validation destroys that.

      @calvinbethea3369@calvinbethea3369 Жыл бұрын
    • @@riotbreaker3506 I mean I get that I wqs just saying I have the opposite opinion fo a cheeseburger when it comes to cuisine based art. Sure its not highbrow really but it does everything food is supposed to do and more, making it(again this is just my opinion) more than a match for pretentious high dining dishes in terms of being culinary art. Just because you have a resuarant as highly rated and desirable as slowik's doesn't mean your food needs to be experimental, difficult, or even expensive. It took margot ordering a cheeseburger without all the fancy stuff for him to realise that. It brought the pleasure back into his job at the end of it all. It's a great allegory for the materialistic society we all live in

      @wingwangtingtang@wingwangtingtang Жыл бұрын
    • i Like that they show her actually eating the cheeseburger at the end, so the viewer knows she was being honest to the chef, That she really did enjoy it.

      @fb101786@fb101786 Жыл бұрын
  • The suppressed excitement he showed in his face when she orders the burger is a masterclass of acting. You can almost feel his joy and that spark of life he had been missing out on.

    @thomasa8814@thomasa8814 Жыл бұрын
    • It's not acting, she just really liked that cheeseburger...

      @mutsuhanma7807@mutsuhanma7807 Жыл бұрын
    • @@mutsuhanma7807 Slowik's smile, not Margot's

      @yohanark7411@yohanark7411 Жыл бұрын
    • I didn't actually see it as excitement smile, I thought he was smiling because he was amused how she must have seen pictures of his past or how she found the loophole

      @vlr7368@vlr7368 Жыл бұрын
    • @@vlr7368 There can be immense "joy" and a "spark of life" in being outplayed. I think it was both. Excitement, a touch of wonder at her audacity, and likely a feeling of being truly understood. She knows the service industry script. She understands the source of his pain, and anger, and joy.

      @e.matthews@e.matthews Жыл бұрын
    • @@vlr7368 nah, if that were the case it would really undermide the entire movie. She didn't find a "loophole," she brought him back to a time when he enjoyed cooking for someone, a thing that he mentioned earlier had not occurred in some time. She reminded him of why he became a chef and for that he allowed her to leave.

      @daviduhr4941@daviduhr4941 Жыл бұрын
  • What she did wasn't a manipulation, she treated the situation as what it was, a service, something no one else did

    @AmusableKitten5@AmusableKitten5 Жыл бұрын
    • only those who stay at the buttom knows the joy of being serve a just nice meal.

      @AndroidNoir-L06k@AndroidNoir-L06k2 ай бұрын
  • This film is about losing your passion. You dreamed of something, you chased it, you achieved it, you lived with it, only to find out that the dream and life you've always wanted wasn't really for you, and it is really heartbreaking. Slowik had a glimpse of why he started his craft but it was brief, but at least he experienced cooking cheeseburger again during the final moments of his life. In general, The Menu wants to tell us that losing yourself is a part of human's life. It's sad, but that's the reality. This film has no shining embellishments about life, just a hard slap of truth.

    @klawis@klawis9 ай бұрын
    • That’s life tho ain’t it

      @PIPpalaceFX@PIPpalaceFX5 ай бұрын
    • For me i think it's that when you have reached the limit (example. his limit was when he was the employee of the mont) but is forced to always elevate and elevate until you forgot what you were supposed to be doing. the world works in where you will always need to evolve and i think some people are comfortable being in the low. it's clear that he STILL has passion for cooking, just that he stopped cooking for people and cooked for status

      @iloveverycoolcats3833@iloveverycoolcats38335 ай бұрын
    • This film is genuinely one of my all time favourites. I legit almost cried when Slowik was cooking that burger

      @nostrum7278@nostrum72784 ай бұрын
    • @@PIPpalaceFXnot really.. it’s when u stop chasing.. u achieved it and the. U have no purpose. Money isn’t everything.. the ones that do lose passion are those that can’t chase cause they reach the top In this case, deconstructing food to the point it’s not food and the people that is able to eat this aren’t even people who love food, they love status. But u see a street vendor who owns his own shop is smiling making simple food.. that’s something they can’t ever have again because of the circle they chose - money, fame fortune

      @npcimknot958@npcimknot9583 ай бұрын
    • I think he didn’t lose passion for his craft. The better of a chef he became, his life started being invaded by those annoying, rich and entitled people. They are the ones that sucked the life out of him not his craft. Being constantly around them, really affected him. In a broader sense they are the ones culpable for destroying the life out of everything because the rest of us live to serve them and it’s never going to be enough for them. They’re bored and shallow. It’s more of a realistic commentary on those group of people. He looked happy cooking that burger, before dying he knew he could die happy

      @GallardoAlejandra@GallardoAlejandraАй бұрын
  • I hate how some people think that Margot "tricked" him, like, she didn't. She knew and understood the flaws of the Menu and the customers that she gave Slowik what he truly needed to make in that situation. Plus, she also clearly enjoyed the cheeseburger so it was a win win.

    @bk.dannaa@bk.dannaa Жыл бұрын
    • he gave expensive food to expensive people and most didnt even like it margot asked for a simple cheeseburger and enjoyed it

      @ryann9026@ryann9026 Жыл бұрын
    • There's also the aspect of how none of the rich people made an effort to escape. A video or article I came across mentioned that subtlety. Margot considered her own survival and took action to change her situation.

      @lainaverse@lainaverse Жыл бұрын
    • @@lainaverse he does say if your all tried you probably could’ve escaped.

      @brucegilbert625@brucegilbert62511 ай бұрын
    • I think you are forgetting one thing. Margot is a prostitute; she sells an illusionary connection to people. She doesn't REALLY want a cheeseburger, rather she knows her mark and how to get what she wants from him (usually money but tonight, her freedom). While it never MEANS ANYTHING to Margot, she leaves another man satisfied and happy. When she bites into the cheeseburger on the shoreline, she demonstrates that she is a taker as well just like the other prostitutes back on the island.

      @michaels7134@michaels713411 ай бұрын
    • @@lainaverse have you not seen the movie ? they literally ran away at one point.

      @jotarokujo5132@jotarokujo513211 ай бұрын
  • In Polish, the chef’s surname, Słowik means a songbird. So he’s a songbird who got tired of singing for the enjoyment of snobbish people and then got reminded of the joy that it used to bring him.

    @ichini525@ichini525 Жыл бұрын
    • Nice

      @joshuataylor3550@joshuataylor3550 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you.

      @a.carolineott@a.carolineott Жыл бұрын
    • Wow 🥹🙏🏻

      @owlmangaming2076@owlmangaming2076 Жыл бұрын
    • Makes sense. I wonder if it was intentional, or just a good sounding name... well, considering the love to detail the movie shows, I would believe the first one.

      @robertnett9793@robertnett9793 Жыл бұрын
    • No wonder Voldemort hates muggles.

      @lissandrafreljord7913@lissandrafreljord7913 Жыл бұрын
  • I saw the cheese burger scene on KZhead shorts and had to watch the movie all the way through. The chef is one of my favorite anti hero’s ever. I found myself on his side the whole entire time because there truly is a softness underneath his madness. “Margot” was able to tap into this softness, giving him a moment of happiness behind the grill one last time before his death. Of course he let her go, she was the only one who saw him for who he really was.

    @Thedarkmaiden@Thedarkmaiden Жыл бұрын
    • same I saw the same youtube shorts clip and watched the movie right after

      @gulsahuslu4012@gulsahuslu4012 Жыл бұрын
    • Same, I just came across the clip and thought "Wow! Which movie is this, and why haven't I heard about it?" The acting is amazing!

      @a_diamond@a_diamond Жыл бұрын
    • He's more anti-villain than anti-hero. No matter how you slice it, he's still a lunatic and a spree murderer. No one there deserved to die. If you're taking the movie at face value rather than the surrealist allegory it is, of course.

      @stillwatersrundeep001@stillwatersrundeep001 Жыл бұрын
    • @@stillwatersrundeep001 I definitely agree with your assessment more but I think neither label applies. He’s a villain who inflicts suffering on everyone around him without discrimination, including his cook staff and innocents like Margot

      @Kalsimir@Kalsimir Жыл бұрын
    • he isn't an antihero he's a made villain

      @widedPada9797@widedPada9797 Жыл бұрын
  • The concept of this movie is so refreshing. It deserves recognition. So many restaurants try to elevate their menu, when all we want is a simple meal that is true to its taste and wont cost a limb

    @cesst3696@cesst369611 ай бұрын
    • And the chefs are supposed to bring joy and satisfaction to people who eat food not because of how beautiful nor pleasing the food was, but because they are hungry. Unfortunately they had to deal with entitled people that made them lose those things that what made them in the first place.

      @jocelantonettetenoc5996@jocelantonettetenoc59966 ай бұрын
  • I love that even though it's proved in the film that Slowik no longer feels pain from heat or fire, or at least chooses to ignore it, by him literally grabbing coals out of a flame, he still uses a dishtowel to press down the spatula, smashing the patties. Another element showing that his very last order is sending him back to his younger days, when he cooked for pleasure.

    @TheodoreCoolman@TheodoreCoolman Жыл бұрын
    • astute observation!

      @UncleJemima@UncleJemima Жыл бұрын
    • Its also oddly heartwarming how you see sparks of a smile in some shots as he cooks the burger. Its as if for an instant he is brought back to a time where things were simple and happy

      @thehermit8618@thehermit8618 Жыл бұрын
    • That and maybe he didn’t wanna you know bleed and leave melted skin in her burger 🤓🤓

      @BlackRose-rp7kv@BlackRose-rp7kv Жыл бұрын
    • @@BlackRose-rp7kv bros the metaphor master stfu lmao

      @TheodoreCoolman@TheodoreCoolman Жыл бұрын
    • @@BlackRose-rp7kv If he was putting his hand on the spatula it wouldn’t even touch the food since the spatula was blocking it and a burn like that wouldn’t cause you to bleed anyways.

      @devinxoxo8350@devinxoxo8350 Жыл бұрын
  • For me, it's that smile he give when he's cooking the burger. For most of the time it's the only time he keep on smiling, a true genuine smile.

    @AngeryCrow@AngeryCrow Жыл бұрын
    • Being present in the present is integral to being able to enjoy it as is being "presented" with a genuinely unique challenge 🍔 We don't savor things that we no longer value due to it becoming routine as a result of losing passion for it 👍💯👍

      @whitneyrose9293@whitneyrose9293 Жыл бұрын
    • Cheeseburger magic, Tohony Stark on top of burger shack.

      @GoldKingsMan@GoldKingsMan Жыл бұрын
    • @@GoldKingsMan Truly, there is no greater magic than that of a cheeseburger. Well put and said.

      @whitneyrose9293@whitneyrose9293 Жыл бұрын
    • I love that he smiles when he sees that look every cheeseburger lover makes when that first bite of flavor/fulfillment/indulgence happens. It is the deep internal knowledge that if a burger is done just right one doesn't need a fancy brioche bun with gold flake foie gras truffle infusions. He knew from her reaction that he did well and created something she appreciated without judgement.

      @es330td@es330td Жыл бұрын
    • @@es330td Do you think you an individual can truly enjoy something without judging and evaluating it consciously or subconsciously?

      @whitneyrose9293@whitneyrose9293 Жыл бұрын
  • One thing that goes under the radar is we can see Slowik using a handkerchief as he presses down on the meat, to obviously keep himself from burning his hands, which, if you watched the movie, know how this is special, as he really is taken back to his early years almost unconsciously to not "reproducing" something he's already mastered, but he is back to being put to the test with that hamburger.✨ I ended up enjoying the movie more than I thought I would.🙌

    @Dansuperfly@Dansuperfly Жыл бұрын
  • Honestly, I broke down crying during the burger scene. I'm a fine dining chef, and I was dealing with some serious depression and burnout when I went out to see it. Watching him finally make something that made him happy just made me crack, and it's still one of my absolute favorite scenes in any movie I've seen in years.

    @eliasroos7185@eliasroos71854 ай бұрын
    • I hope you're doing well now :). We didn't have much growing up and I still struggle sometimes, but remember that some of those people who come to fine dining places (unfortunately you probably never meet them) are spending what is to them exorbitant sums to celebrate key moments. One of my favorite moments was when my Dad drove us hours away into to the city for Ruth's Chris when I graduated high school. It meant so much to me. I don't know if that counts as fine dining, but it made my damn year. I will never forget that Ribeye. I got the only Creme Brule and happily passed it around to share with my family. There are people who appreciate what you do, everyday!

      @mweb586@mweb5869 күн бұрын
  • She didn't trick him. She gave him what he desired. In a way, she serviced him similar to him serving her. It was a mutual respect, a mutual understanding, and a fair trade. She didn't deserve to die like the rest because she gave him the one thing he had been missing for decades. Ps: wow,15k likes for this comment! Crazy. Really makes me happy, because I really love this movie. I think it's one of the best films I've seen in quite some time.

    @xplosiv211@xplosiv211 Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly

      @DAKreates@DAKreates Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly

      @dawe964@dawe964 Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly

      @smaragd2421@smaragd2421 Жыл бұрын
    • EXACTLY

      @kevooo1250@kevooo1250 Жыл бұрын
    • Well said.

      @EsuChiefCraig@EsuChiefCraig Жыл бұрын
  • “These are tortillas” is my favorite delivery of any line in this film, and there are a lot of gems to choose from.

    @jnpilot@jnpilot Жыл бұрын
    • YUP LOL

      @slipperyfella4171@slipperyfella4171 Жыл бұрын
    • the pronunciation of "tortilla" got me

      @daviduhr4941@daviduhr4941 Жыл бұрын
    • @@daviduhr4941 she said it correctly tho, just said it a bit louder

      @slipperyfella4171@slipperyfella4171 Жыл бұрын
    • American Cheese is the best cheese for a cheeseburger because it melts without splitting. Love the delivery and smoothness on that line

      @mauricioprado5189@mauricioprado5189 Жыл бұрын
    • "torTILLA delicioso"

      @0heda734@0heda734 Жыл бұрын
  • I had the privilege of working with my mom in a nursing home. I was lucky growing up with a mother who loved to cook, we were extremely poor, but somehow it was all delicious. When she went to work at a nursing home as a cook. It turned the staff and residents world upside down. It didn't matter if it was a low sodium diet, a diabetic diet and even pureed food, it was wonderful. She loved to cook but I think she loved those residents more and gave them many happy moments around the tables. I love and miss her.

    @darlalei4303@darlalei4303 Жыл бұрын
  • I think this is much deeper than people realize. I think the director of this film is living vicariously through the chef. He strives to create film after film, none of which anyone appreciates these days. And yet it is never enough. He can never just make a simple film that people are happy with.

    @gorgeousnoxy481@gorgeousnoxy481 Жыл бұрын
    • I thought this too while watching this movie, it was almost as if this movie was "the menu"

      @name-mh2cn@name-mh2cn10 ай бұрын
    • @@name-mh2cn I thought after I wrote this too how much this makes sense as well considering his choice of characters... The actor, the critics, the wallstreet guys robbing him of his share of the artwork he creates, etc.

      @gorgeousnoxy481@gorgeousnoxy48110 ай бұрын
    • @@gorgeousnoxy481 yes absolutely! You've got a great eye for the deeper meaning. This movie is so well tought out its so beautiful.

      @name-mh2cn@name-mh2cn10 ай бұрын
    • And yet he did.

      @kiwthebeauty@kiwthebeauty10 ай бұрын
    • @@kiwthebeauty There was nothing simple about this film. It was filled with ambiguity and complexity intentionally.

      @gorgeousnoxy481@gorgeousnoxy48110 ай бұрын
  • I think it’s because she proved she was a service worker. Her service was making people feel good, and through the cheeseburger she made him feel good.

    @Whatwhat4007@Whatwhat4007 Жыл бұрын
    • Indeed 🙌🏾 she gave him a gift before his final act.

      @apiadventures3213@apiadventures3213 Жыл бұрын
    • This is likely correct, and also my interpretation of the act. At that point, it becomes a simple transaction, and when she asked for it to go, he realized it was a transaction and he only had one way to pay.

      @thetoastisburntgmail@thetoastisburntgmail Жыл бұрын
    • @@thetoastisburntgmailyee! I also think one of the reasons he let her go is because he wanted to enjoy the transaction. She helped him by enjoying something he provided, so when she said she couldn’t finish it and asked for it to go, he couldn’t prevent her from finishing without stopping the only person to truly enjoy his cooking in decades from finishing what he made.

      @Numbabu@Numbabu Жыл бұрын
    • that's interesting, I hadn't thought about that

      @chunky16@chunky16 Жыл бұрын
    • Moron all she did was ask for it to go.He did say everyone could leave if they choose too.

      @DensilGrant@DensilGrant Жыл бұрын
  • If you look at Ratatouille and it's ending, it really is the same concept from the other side. When we eat, we should appreciate and enjoy our food even if it's "simple" or "lowbrow" just like the cheeseburger... That's why Erin/Margot finished eating it, it WAS a good burger.

    @albertko1@albertko1 Жыл бұрын
    • I thought of Ratatouille as well, except the nostalgia from cooking vs eating.

      @JovianAtrocity@JovianAtrocity Жыл бұрын
    • I also thought of that film !

      @briansmith2163@briansmith2163 Жыл бұрын
    • Triumph of the mediocre, anti-progression. You have been brainwashed

      @acknowledgedofalltheconseq366@acknowledgedofalltheconseq366 Жыл бұрын
    • Welcome good burger home of the good burger can I take your order?

      @jjpc225@jjpc225 Жыл бұрын
    • @@acknowledgedofalltheconseq366 Crustiest comment i've seen here

      @CuZtuga@CuZtuga Жыл бұрын
  • I am a restaurant manager of a 2 Michelin Star restaurant in the UK, named #1 for 2 years running. I just wanted to say that whoever consulted on the food/restaurant in this movie did a fantastic job. Nailing the range of guests we deal with every day and the genuine heartbreak that chefs at this level deal with on the inside, Every. Single. Day. A little over the top of course but it would simple be an excellent episode of Netflix's Chefs Table if no one died.

    @PSNiNutty@PSNiNutty8 ай бұрын
    • Well, they can quit their jobs and start working as labors on a factory or something if it's so unbearably hard.

      @user-js2oj2qi8h@user-js2oj2qi8h6 күн бұрын
  • Here's something I noticed that might or might not have been intentional: the burgers are Oklahoma-style. They came from the Depression and Dust Bowl era. Cooks would stuff their burgers with cheap onions(way more than Slowik uses) to make the beef go farther. It's struggle food.

    @coalcreekdefense8106@coalcreekdefense81066 ай бұрын
  • She is allowed to escape (at least in part) because a cheap cheeseburger MUST be a "to go" cheeseburger. He and she understood this. If she had not asked to get it to go, she would have died with the others.

    @Aristotle2000@Aristotle2000 Жыл бұрын
    • @@santiagocarracedo7938 wtf are you on about? the director of this movie literally confirmed that she's survived and called that burger a "victory burger".

      @drmaulana2600@drmaulana2600 Жыл бұрын
    • @@santiagocarracedo7938 they use fresh ground beef when they cook it

      @ihatenubs@ihatenubs Жыл бұрын
    • @@santiagocarracedo7938 where are your resources? So many people keep saying that, but the Director had already confirmed that she is alive. Her character is after taking a bite out of that burger.

      @adrianghandtchi1562@adrianghandtchi1562 Жыл бұрын
    • @@santiagocarracedo7938 Just to add with what others have said. Margot specifically said none of that fancy bullsh*t and Slowik agreed saying the cheapest burger her parents could barely afford. That meat Slowik used could never be from that fancy Nord-style barn we saw earlier.

      @nixandre8863@nixandre8863 Жыл бұрын
    • You must have missed the scene where she saw the picture of him cooking a burger. It was the last time he was visibly happy. You can then see him grinning the entire time he's cooking and when she takes a bite. She gave him back his happiness for cooking if only for a brief moment.

      @disturbed157@disturbed157 Жыл бұрын
  • Let's be honest. That cheeseburger looked amazing.

    @lukehopper8380@lukehopper8380 Жыл бұрын
    • I actually wish I had ground beef right now if make me one.

      @ronnetteharvey2002@ronnetteharvey2002 Жыл бұрын
    • It was just a Well made Cheeseburger

      @tomzeru@tomzeru Жыл бұрын
    • I wanted a cheeseburger so bad after watching this scene

      @markpierce4416@markpierce4416 Жыл бұрын
    • I watched that and thought, "Screw my cholesterol level!" I'm pretty sure my corps will be found with a double cheeseburger half-finished in my mouth, which will be smiling.

      @ChrisGurin@ChrisGurin Жыл бұрын
    • Fuck yeah it did- i got so hungry after just watching that scene, that i galloped to the place, where i usually eat burgers at once a week, just to sink my teeth into one of theirs. They make their own buns, their beef is so clean- pure meat, no veins, nothing chewy- and they put so many tasty vegetables in it, that my mouth actually waters just thinking about it- i am going to go there in 4- 5 days again, but Hell- Good burger is a good burger and i pity people, who disregard that type of food. Nothing better than sitting down with good food and a few cold shots after hard week- maybe it is bit simplistic, but as soon as i saw that woman chewing on good burger, i knew what she felt. Just for a second i was out of any shit i a normally in- my moment of freedom, if you will

      @heretyk_1337@heretyk_1337 Жыл бұрын
  • Margot got bread because it’s part of the dish. The fact that it goes without saying is merely respectful, even dignified; and yes, a detail I’m sure we’re supposed to notice. The other guests wanted bread, at least somewhat, arbitrarily. The bread, for those guests, represents their desire to eat for the sake of eating. Another thing is that Margot is actually hungry, “starved,” even. This also probably fits more the profile his typical customer back in the day. May be reaching there… just a thought.

    @CatMoonErickson@CatMoonErickson Жыл бұрын
    • Bread is also common man's food, it's the basis of many fundamental meals, it's a staple, based on a staple grain, not serving it leans into many of the films themes

      @schr4nz@schr4nz6 ай бұрын
    • No, I think you're onto something. People always want free bread with their meal, and people tend to make a tremendous stink if they can't get it. (Good old customer-is-always-right entitlement).

      @supersonicfroot@supersonicfroot5 ай бұрын
  • This was the best movie of the year. It was such a sad story, but just amazing at the same time. At the end, even those takers realize what they were and accept their fates.

    @Redman147@Redman147 Жыл бұрын
    • I think it was the most pretentious movie of the year if not decade so far but glad that apparently so many people saw something meaningful in it..

      @bingobongo1615@bingobongo1615 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bingobongo1615 Are you okay?

      @brycemedvin8765@brycemedvin8765 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@bingobongo1615 it being pretentious was the entire point

      @yoursodumn@yoursodumn11 ай бұрын
    • @@bingobongo1615 taker spotted. why cant you sit down and enjoy a simple cheeseburger- i mean movie?

      @REDACTED_7@REDACTED_711 ай бұрын
    • @@bingobongo1615 i laughed a lot during the movie. It's full of comedic moments, and it's not political at all too. It's not pretentious.

      @REDACTED_7@REDACTED_711 ай бұрын
  • I was a chef and restaurant owner for many many years. Worked in a kitchen for 22 years. this movie was exactly what I wanted to see. I kept my menu simple, but knew a few incredible chefs. One had a Michelin star. He hated his life trying to maintain it and it sucked his enjoyment in life completely dry. He closed his fancy restaurant, and opened a simple but delicious street street taco shop in La Jolla. He was way happier making tasty food for everybody that would just appreciate it rather than picky rich bastards who pay $500 for a meal they would nitpick and complain about. My other friend was super successful chef who traveled with a TV show and cooked for the cast on location throughout several states. He made $275k a year as the executive chef, and eventually hated life so much he quit and came to work with me for $20 an hour. He was way happier in the small kitchen than trying to constantly impress celebrities across the country

    @theshapeexists@theshapeexists Жыл бұрын
    • Food is one of the greatest joys in life. It is such a beautiful experience. Just remember a lot of do appreciate you. I love cooking, I keep trying but I am very bad at it. It makes me appreciate all the work and care put into it.

      @phoenixastra4429@phoenixastra4429 Жыл бұрын
    • In Malaysia, we have lots of sellers of Ramly Burger, the local version of McDonald’s… Many of them trade in roadside stalls or food trucks and one thing is in common - they all enjoy doing what they’re doing, without having to be in a fancy restaurant and all… Kinda reminds me of Chef Justin in his simpler burger-frying times also!

      @my_MillenniumFalcon@my_MillenniumFalcon Жыл бұрын
    • What’s the taco shop called? I’m in La Jolla and I would love to try 😄

      @ryannguyen9259@ryannguyen9259 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ryannguyen9259 its called Galaxy Tacos. Try it! Its been 2 years since I've been but recently looked them up. They used to have a non local chef from any place across the world fly in and do a menu takeover on Thursdays, and the 2 Thursdays I went they had some pretty incredible menus there.

      @theshapeexists@theshapeexists Жыл бұрын
    • It's amazing how often I hear this story amongst the best chefs. I ran a street food restaurant for a while and met lots of chefs who worked in kitchens that demanded perfection . One of these chefs is a friend of mine and he seems to have gone through the exact same cycle as the individual you know. Worked himself to the bone in fine dining, but chose happiness and now runs his own taco stall at markets around the country. He's much happier.

      @KayJayFusion@KayJayFusion Жыл бұрын
  • I’ll never get over the fact that this hostage situation was so intense and mentally isolating that the guests all say “we love you chef” through tears and acceptance and surrender, it gives me chills…also the poor wife being the one to gently wave Margot/Erin off, so she could take the next step without a huge guilt keeping her from moving. (Bonus, the poor wife saying thank you, had me sobbing…that woman knew what her life was and was horrifically welcoming a cleansed soul)….I love this movie 🍽

    @scottieboy5429@scottieboy5429 Жыл бұрын
    • I felt bad for the wife at the end, she didn’t beg to leave or anything but she was saying get out while you can

      @professordoungut@professordoungut Жыл бұрын
    • I'm surprised more aren't talking about this as this is probably the most twisted dark part of the movie. Perhaps deep down they know they aren't the best people, maybe they are punishing themselves, they could just be in a state of shock or as with Stockholm syndrome have formed a sort of bond or liking to their aggressor as he promises them a form of spiritual cleansing. What's clear is that neither the chef, the others chefs not the privileged guests really know what love is.

      @kevankwok01@kevankwok01 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah Stockholm Syndrome probably. Over the course of the night the chef had managed to instill in everyone's minds that they all deserved this fate, the guests and even his kitchen staff.

      @AC-iz7eh@AC-iz7eh Жыл бұрын
    • @@kevankwok01 i was getting Stockholm vibes too

      @professordoungut@professordoungut Жыл бұрын
    • Hits even harder when she caught a glimpse of Erin and immediately made the connection to the resemblance to their daughter Claire, and then soon came to the realization that her husband had been cheating on her with escorts during the taco course. She very likely was forced to make the connection, probably realize what she had known deep down and thus the fact she’d been enabling it, so she thanks the chef for “purifying” them so they can be “remade anew.”

      @R.444-@R.444- Жыл бұрын
  • I think that part of Margot's (or Erin's) saving grace was that she, like Slowik, was willing to admit and come to terms with who she really was. None of the others were at all capable of that.

    @mmj7700@mmj770011 ай бұрын
  • You can see the gratefulness in his eyes. Saddened by time but, while still sad, revitalized in her presence, like he was finally given the permission not to die, but to live.

    @donkylefernandez4680@donkylefernandez468010 ай бұрын
  • I actually tear up during the perfect scene where he is making Erin/Margot that cheeseburger. He was happy as hell making that burger, it was pure joy to see.

    @Mimzy1313@Mimzy1313 Жыл бұрын
    • I THIUGHT I WAS THE ONLY ONE GOD IT HIT ME IDK WHY

      @babycakenerds@babycakenerds Жыл бұрын
    • She was giving him joy. And when she(the oppressed) demanded freedom from the Oppressor 😮❤ it was the perfect end to that whole situation. What a great movie. Imagine having your life depend on ordering a cheeseburger.

      @focusandflowtarot4325@focusandflowtarot4325 Жыл бұрын
    • @@focusandflowtarot4325 Well stated madam!

      @Mimzy1313@Mimzy1313 Жыл бұрын
    • poor chef booo whoo he is a rich wanker who murdered other rich wankers

      @whitedom2041@whitedom2041 Жыл бұрын
    • @@babycakenerds omg i thought that i am a psychopath bc i cried AHAHAHH

      @bruggski@bruggski Жыл бұрын
  • When she asks for it to go his acting is great. He looks so torn. He knows as someone in service industry he has to oblige but he had already decided that no one is leaving. It's a simple way to beat the game but it makes perfect sense. Oddly enough, it's actually kind of a happy ending for everyone

    @JaqenHghar.@JaqenHghar. Жыл бұрын
    • In that moment she completely severs herself from “the menu” - someone who was never supposed to be a part of it anyway, did not fit with the clientele selected for this night, there by happenstance because Tyler used her. Even down to her asking how much it’ll set her back and leaving the crumpled ten dollar bill (the other guests tossing their credit cards, gratuity included as no one tips at Hawthorne). She is no longer, and never truly was, the kind of customer who eats at this restaurant, but the kind of customer from his memory, just one person at a burger joint who wants something simple and satisfying.

      @R.444-@R.444- Жыл бұрын
    • @sexweed yeah... maybe. From the beginning he seemed very distraught about her being there because he didn't want to kill someone he hadn't already planned on killing but he had already planned the dinner and you don't fuck with the chefs menu it cant be changed so even though he doesn't think she deserves it she still has to die. But I can see your point as well. He was finally serving someone worthy of his service just like back when he started so he definitely liked her as a guest but I think that would make him want to let her go even more not kill her but like I said, I see your point. It could easily be a combination of the two. The fact that it's not outright said makes it that much better because we're all allowed to fill in the blanks however we choose

      @JaqenHghar.@JaqenHghar. Жыл бұрын
  • Here's my thoughts on the movie: Slowik was very upset at the food critic and people like Margot's date for being responsible for taking the enjoyment he was felt for his craft. When Margot saw the article of him as an up and coming chef, she saw someone miserable from the expectations of perfection. Contrast that with the photo of him making burgers and she was able to put it all together. He needed to be reminded of the joy he once felt. The simple act of providing someone with food that they love. She gave that to him and in return, deserved to live. It was an even exchange. I honestly thought the concept was rather simple. I came away from the film appreciating the acting, writing, etc but thought it was rather straightforward. Perhaps even a little disappointed. That's when it hit me. The entire film was the writer's commentary on the state of cinema. It is nearly impossible to please the modern audience anymore. Having to be so critical of every idea you have or word you write has taken the fun out of the art form. When I realized this, the true genius of the movie became clear and I really appreciated it.

    @Wilbrown89@Wilbrown89 Жыл бұрын
    • That’s LITERALLY what you’re doing….

      @korykent5645@korykent5645 Жыл бұрын
    • @@korykent5645 that's LITERALLY my point.

      @Wilbrown89@Wilbrown89 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Wilbrown89 boo

      @korykent5645@korykent5645 Жыл бұрын
    • @@korykent5645 you're having a "whoosh" moment

      @Wilbrown89@Wilbrown89 Жыл бұрын
    • It is really not hard to please us. Just make non dogshit movies. If anything, we are margo. The only reason why you see alot of negativity towards the industry is because alot of movies are cookie cutter and mass produced, but his movies clearly are not disliked

      @alpha_9997@alpha_99978 ай бұрын
  • I have worked in the world of Fine Dining for over 15 years, I am currently a Beverage Director and Consultant designing cocktails for Michelin awarded programs. This video was truly lovely in breaking down the themes, struggles and emotions in this film. I have to make the most elaborate, creative, and adventurous presentations and flavor combinations i can push myself to create for a clientele that will never know my name but expect this experience. My favorite thing to make for people is The Classic Daiquiri. Rum, Sugar, Lime. All things balanced delicately in perfections with Ice, and technique. Bright, Refreshing, Eloquent. there is no greater joy i've experienced than handing someone this tasty little treat and seeing the joy it brings them. I can only imagine the mind of Chef Slowick as he delivers the cheeseburger.

    @paulwagner5395@paulwagner5395 Жыл бұрын
    • As someone who also designs cocktails and owns a company that does bar products, I can confirm, the Daiquiri one of the most eloquent yet simple drinks. I always test bartenders by just having them make a daiquiri for me, it's easy to make a decent one, but it takes skill to really nail it.

      @BrianSmith-bk2ii@BrianSmith-bk2ii Жыл бұрын
  • Imagine how good that burger is that she takes a bite after she leaves. Considering everything that she has went through and observed, she still like hold up I need another bite.

    @jasperpennsington663@jasperpennsington663 Жыл бұрын
    • She felt like squidward when he bit into his first krabby patty

      @pengyzin8668@pengyzin8668 Жыл бұрын
    • Well, she did say she was "fkin hungry" and many people had to die to make that cheeseburger

      @AC-iz7eh@AC-iz7eh Жыл бұрын
  • this movie hit me hard. I'm currently a chef for a local brewery and have worked in various fine dinning spaces throughout my city but around a year or so ago I started to doubt the direction I was going in. when my roommate asked what I would do instead the one idea I could not get out of my head was starting a burger joint. something simple but comforting. a place families would want to go to to spend time together. a place for highschool sweethearts to make memories they could one day share with their kids. I want to make a Home...

    @theeristicwriter8280@theeristicwriter8280 Жыл бұрын
    • Well made burgers are amazing !!! Try maybe a food truck or something with small over head that’s usually the bane of new restaurants , good luck man

      @nathanrobbins8976@nathanrobbins8976 Жыл бұрын
    • The reasons you want to do that is beautiful. I really hope that one day you can make this dream reality ❤️

      @Charlie-pu9bx@Charlie-pu9bx Жыл бұрын
    • @Nathan Robbins as somebody who has run both. unfortunately a food truck's overheads are comparable to a restaurant 😕 the benefit is that you can go where the people are. witha. restaurant you rely on the area being busy

      @jlscoyserney@jlscoyserney Жыл бұрын
    • I'm from Sydney Australia and worked with hundreds of restaurant owners to launch foodora, Australia's first premium on demand food delivery service. Gourmet burgers were always one of the top sellers. Think a blue cheese, wagyu beef burger with caramelized onion & a homemade tomato chutney. What I noticed is that casual dining opened by former fine dining chef's were always amazing. They had the techniques, discipline, appreciation for quality and love for food but without being too stiff or just for a niche of people to enjoy. Many opened up gourmet burger bars and have done very well. Perhaps you can weave some local beer in to your burgers. Add a few vegetarian burgers as well. Interesting fries like polenta, halloumi, zucchini, sweet potato. Home made sauces. Brioche buns. Good luck!

      @kevankwok01@kevankwok01 Жыл бұрын
    • I hope you open that burger joint or foodtruck. I am middle aged and regret not going to culinary school. Cooking and food is my passion. 20plus years in a jobs that arent my passion. Please name a burger after a crazy cat lady.

      @MsMedford@MsMedford Жыл бұрын
  • I think Margot/Erin was the only one who really wanted to live, because despite being taken hostage and the deep effects it has on people, she still kept on trying to find a way out. Unlike the others who gave up after a couple tries. She persisted, especially when she went to the Chef's cabin and strategically used the Chef's photo of him cooking burgers when he was young. I also noticed that all of them complained about being there, but none of them really asked to the bitter end to be kept alive instead they accepted their death. In the other hand, Margot/Erin sat down when they were preparing the last course knowing it could be her last chance to escape, so she used her will to live and tricked him into letting her go. At least in my eyes, people that are that crazy as to plan a whole mass suicide (I think it was a mass suicide instead of a mass murder), cannot relate to people anymore. I believe people like that are so apathetic to others that the only way to get to them is by playing by their rules, and she did. Because no pleading, or not any number of tears could turn his heart around. The only way was to trick him into doing exactly the thing he respects, which is cooking.

    @sabrenuh9924@sabrenuh9924 Жыл бұрын
    • There's a drug which makes people lose their will or agency to do something, I forget what it is called, probably some amphetamine, but since Margot refuses to eat, it is possible she's the only one with enough determination to act, the others being too drugged to do anything. The story never implies they were drugged but it's only reasonable in my mind as to why everyone is so complacent

      @julianjpantoja4603@julianjpantoja4603 Жыл бұрын
    • @@julianjpantoja4603 burundanga (scopolamine)

      @carolinec1213@carolinec1213 Жыл бұрын
    • @@julianjpantoja4603 oh snap, like scopolamine or something ??

      @AbbyDishongh@AbbyDishongh Жыл бұрын
    • @@julianjpantoja4603 Very on point...never thought about drugs being laced into the food. Makes complete sense as to why the only one that didn't eat was the only coherent one (and also the one who ate the most, being Tyler, was the least rational and ended up killing himself as soon as Chef asked). Probably why the Chef was so adamant she ate and was so peeved to see her rebel against eating, as if she already knew what his intentions were. On another point, I don't know how she ended up at the restaurant (I mean why chose her among other people to join you and die with you?), but it doesn't seem completely at random. Especially since she knew other guests as well. Anyway, thanks for bringing it up because now I get their weird acceptance with death.

      @sabrenuh9924@sabrenuh9924 Жыл бұрын
    • That's a very compelling theory!

      @zestybutterfly7161@zestybutterfly716111 ай бұрын
  • I love that he served the cheesburger on a warped paper plate

    @joez6235@joez6235 Жыл бұрын
    • Turns out that paper looking plate was porcelain.

      @kaspernbs@kaspernbs Жыл бұрын
    • The "paper" porcelain plate is $72-$85 online at Food52...

      @caronstout354@caronstout354 Жыл бұрын
    • @@caronstout354 & @kaspernbs Well I guess he couldn't help himself. Had to add that last touch of decadence. At least he didn't use the pacojet.

      @joez6235@joez6235 Жыл бұрын
  • Watching that burger being cooked looked so damn delicious compared to the other food. The shots and acting of the scenes are perfection!

    @xtuffcookiex@xtuffcookiex Жыл бұрын
    • @@veselindochev8557 Same! I'd eat this burger tho 🙈

      @mikaelastefkova@mikaelastefkova Жыл бұрын
    • I 100% ordered a cheeseburger shortly after watching that scene. It looked so unbelievably good, lol.

      @JoseDiaz12@JoseDiaz12 Жыл бұрын
  • As insane as he was I never felt like Slowik showed Margo malice even in the most harrowing scene between them in the ladies room he seemed genuinely concerned that she wasn't eating,not buying into his scheme but genuinely she wasn't eating. When she finally declares her hunger and enthusiasm to eat he had to stiffle a smile because he finally got to do what all folks who love to cook love to do and that was feed someone who was enthusiastic about being fed. I was dying laughing but through it all I was really rooting for Slowik and by the end was glad Margo got got and he still got what he wanted.

    @Agentbear420@Agentbear420 Жыл бұрын
    • it’s because she literally was not supposed to be there, coupled with the fact he realized she was also a “service” worker like them and thus was one of the group, not the guests.

      @zheretxc@zheretxc Жыл бұрын
    • I'll remind you, it was actually Chef Katherine's idea to kill everybody.

      @thedarkemissary@thedarkemissary Жыл бұрын
  • The comparison to classic art is beautiful. And you nailed this on the head.

    @singitagainsam766@singitagainsam766 Жыл бұрын
  • This was a great and straightforward video! Loved the structure and voiceover. 🎞👏

    @l.m.5974@l.m.5974 Жыл бұрын
  • He lost all his love for being a chef, serving these types of people drained it from him, he lost his passion. So hearing margot ask for a cheese burger ignited his passion once again through the love he had from that first job, it brought back the memories and the joy he had from it. This is coming from a chef who completely understands the power that food has and what memories it can bring back to a person

    @daniellewalker329@daniellewalker329 Жыл бұрын
    • And if you want to get really philosophical about it she represented his last bit of humanity and when she was allowed to leave he had one fleeting moment of happiness and he felt human again and with her gone there was nothing tying him to the world anymore

      @church_world_domination9357@church_world_domination9357 Жыл бұрын
  • I took it as a clever way for her to tap into the time he loved cooking. She saw the article of him with the big smile on his face holding out the spatula with the burger. In the end she gave him one last opportunity to love what he did.

    @panianap9408@panianap9408 Жыл бұрын
    • Bingo! I completely agree.

      @nunyab5955@nunyab5955 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes, and I think that is why he let her go

      @ahstiasummers5583@ahstiasummers5583 Жыл бұрын
    • But no, that would be way to easy and mundane, that can't possibly be the reason!!! I agree with you that is most likely the reason for it, all the other explanations are hard trys to make the white wall be a symbol for blablabla instead of a white wall because the artist didn't have an idea.

      @Neknesch@Neknesch Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly!

      @TrainingTipsy@TrainingTipsy Жыл бұрын
    • this, thats the foreshadow when she snuck in the room. I though he was the father or sth but that end explains the burger end😂

      @antworker3634@antworker3634 Жыл бұрын
  • She brought back his joy by bringing him back to when he was employee of the month flipping burgers. His entire face as she orders and as he cooks it expresses it perfectly. The first time he looks happy or like he loves what he does, rather than a ragingly obsessed cult leader.

    @nicolina1026@nicolina1026 Жыл бұрын
    • For me it's the fact that he actually cooked it himself. All the other plates were made by the other sous chef/assistants. This is the only plate at least in the movie that he makes himself.

      @n3tw0rk_n3k0@n3tw0rk_n3k0 Жыл бұрын
  • I took it as his inspiration to cook in the 1st place. He loved what he did when he was making cheeseburgers that made people happy. Instead of the culinary world that is never satisfied and makes you always feel you have to strive for better or re-imagine and improve everything. She knew asking for him to cook that Cheesburger and then loving it was what he had lost in his life. She EARNED her life in that movie, def an interesting watch!

    @shaunah.1165@shaunah.1165 Жыл бұрын
  • The ending was an escape story....Erin helped Chef Slowik briefly escape his own madness, and Erin was allowed to escape with her life. throughout the movie you'll notice Chef Slowik has a somber and joyless expression, until the end when asked for a simple cheeseburger. In a way Chef Slowik serves his customers without any real joy, but Erin served Chef Slowik in reminding him of his own humanity, if ever briefly.

    @ploofedoof1@ploofedoof1 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes, the film was good. I think it's somewhat subjective whether the Slowik was a victim getting revenge or just a man going through a crisis that comes with reaching the pinnacle of one's ambitions. It's not clear that he wasn't a monster because he set himself on a path of success at the cost of his own joy.

      @AW-lo7sz@AW-lo7sz5 ай бұрын
  • “Are the fryers still on?” As someone who recently went back to Jasons Deli from being a sous chef, there was a certain cathartic release I got from watching a man dedicated to his craft, just wanting to get back to his roots an enjoy serving simple food to simple people. I love this movie.

    @jordanphillips3593@jordanphillips3593 Жыл бұрын
    • This movie is still confusing as heck to me….

      @8plays876@8plays876 Жыл бұрын
    • @@8plays876 Margot was not supposed to be there; she was not part of the miserable life of Slowik. The entire menu was like a slap to all their faces-an eloquent way of exposing one's wrongdoings. So far, that's how I'd summarize the entire plot.

      @ylvasvielYT@ylvasvielYT Жыл бұрын
    • I used to really enjoy my local Jasons deli got to be a bit too expensive for me to go to on my fixed income but Id go now and then anyway...then covid happened and my local location permenetly closed... shame

      @talthan@talthan Жыл бұрын
    • Ahh Jason's Deli! My first job ever, & still love the food

      @TheRealTMoon@TheRealTMoon Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@ylvasvielYTMargot got dragged by tyler in the beginning, hence why she wasn't supposed to be there.

      @jocelantonettetenoc5996@jocelantonettetenoc59966 ай бұрын
  • Wonderful acting. Both Margo and Slowik are outstanding in their ability to portray their emotions, Slowik's pleasure in cooking again, and Margot's enjoyment of the cheeseburger and her appreciation for it. Little things like the $10 payment for the cheeseburger make this a stand out movie that is very under appreciated.

    @bf-696@bf-6968 ай бұрын
  • Beautifully articulated. I'm shocked. I was a bit confused regarding this movie. I caught some of the nuances, but you, sir, have driven it home through this thoughtful and insightful breakdown. Bravo! Now I want a cheeseburger! 🤤

    @starlingswallow@starlingswallow11 ай бұрын
  • Great analysis! Also I thought it was fitting that Erin/Margot was the only one to eat bread - As in the bun of the cheeseburger - since the earlier course literally refused to serve the guests bread as a representation of how far removed they all were from the fundamental purpose of cooking and eating.

    @warwickwagner4797@warwickwagner4797 Жыл бұрын
    • Maybe not the perfect way to phrase it, but you could also say he refused to break bread with those he saw as his enemies

      @shanethebrownwolf5575@shanethebrownwolf5575 Жыл бұрын
    • @@shanethebrownwolf5575 or perhaps it is a guestright sort of thing? were guests under the same rooftop are served bread as a token that they would not be harmed? just my speculation of course.

      @miruuuuuuuu@miruuuuuuuu Жыл бұрын
    • Not even really that great, it's literally in the movie lol

      @ryancols@ryancols Жыл бұрын
  • The movie is referenced at Fujimoto's last manga, called Chainsaw man, chapters 123-124. Also, he references many movies. It got animation recently, called with same name, Chainsaw man, referenced by the fans as "CSM". Many movies references from just the opening of the series. You will never see a mangaka showing so much love to western movies as he does.

    @rubemartur8239@rubemartur8239 Жыл бұрын
  • Fantastic commentary and spot on. May you continue exploring movies like this and sharing your lovely wisdom with us.

    @isaiasrodriguez8980@isaiasrodriguez89805 ай бұрын
  • Just finished watching it. When the film ended I paused for a while then I couldn't stop crying. I'm not a chef but I have a tiny cake business for 4yrs. Just last December I just realized that I lost my passion. I don't hate baking but the thought of doing it just for the money without the passion made me sad. I felt so lost again. I'm nowhere a chef like Julian but I understand what he feels. So tired, burned out and lost my passion.

    @cosmicgalaxystudio1539@cosmicgalaxystudio1539 Жыл бұрын
    • Hang in there. Work doesn't define you.

      @Stevelemontrudy@Stevelemontrudy Жыл бұрын
    • Can you tell me if this guy was tired of who he was cooking, why didn't he just move and open some crappy small restaurant somewhere else?

      @PedroTricking@PedroTricking Жыл бұрын
    • @@PedroTricking Taking a guess here, maybe he assumed that expectations were so sky-high that going back to roots wouldn't be 'good enough'?

      @dragontear1638@dragontear1638 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@PedroTricking because he just some psychopath who create cult just because he bored lol

      @iclovemime1@iclovemime1 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Stevelemontrudy thank you. So nice to hear that 😊

      @cosmicgalaxystudio1539@cosmicgalaxystudio1539 Жыл бұрын
  • Just remember. Even Erin was wearing a facade of happiness thruout the movie. They are similar, in the fact that they both were happy at first in their service jobs, but it grew out of them because of the people who continued to use them. Then at the end, they no longer need those facades of happiness. She makes him happy, and he sets her free. Her name is Erin, not Margot. Something that everyone seems to forget. His name was Justin, not Chef. Something that people no longer call him.

    @riotto1802@riotto1802 Жыл бұрын
    • I thought the chef's name was Julian Slowik?

      @AC-iz7eh@AC-iz7eh Жыл бұрын
    • I will never forget Jerome.

      @JollibeenosHasYourCoordinates@JollibeenosHasYourCoordinates Жыл бұрын
    • RIP Jason.

      @melonlord2851@melonlord2851 Жыл бұрын
    • rip jeremy gone but not forgotten

      @Arnazisti@Arnazisti Жыл бұрын
    • Jedidiah; a legendary chef we all must remember.

      @Akael22@Akael22 Жыл бұрын
  • I can't fathom why anyone needed this explained.

    @dougbrown04@dougbrown04 Жыл бұрын
  • "Okay Tyler, you suck at cooking. But that's okay. You have one more chance, make me a hinge" *sets timer

    @Eldrich4291@Eldrich4291 Жыл бұрын
    • A cut so deep I think it hit bone. But for that... I pardon you.

      @ChristopherMB87@ChristopherMB87 Жыл бұрын
    • Lmaooo

      @thekidbilly1886@thekidbilly1886 Жыл бұрын
  • Weirdly this movie was very relatable for me as I think for many others; I am no chef,But I used to draw. My whole life was revolved about drawing , I wanted to study art and make a job from it, but in the process , the enjoyment faded away , I cried , since this was supposed to be my dream since the beginning. It was like watching a part of myself die, but I had to keep going , because this was what I wanted. In the end, I accepted it, I was tired. Losing the passion for doing something is heartbreaking, this movie captures that feeling at least in my opinion. (I’m sorry if this is kinda hard to read , my English needs more practice)

    @tiredartist3234@tiredartist3234 Жыл бұрын
    • Same thing for me as an actor. It was my dream and I did it for so long I forgot why it made me happy in the first place

      @chandlerholloway3900@chandlerholloway3900 Жыл бұрын
    • Similar to the both of you, I am a freelance actor and artist, with similar sentiments and frustrations. I act because I didn’t get much commissions or appreciation in my art, and I paint because it pays the bills and good acting jobs are scarce anyway. I’m tired. I’ll still do both when the better opportunities arrive but in the meantime I’ve decided to get a job at a gym instead…

      @EdricHsu@EdricHsu Жыл бұрын
    • art was my passion since i was a small child but my parents convinced me that art would took me nowhere in life and decided i would go to law school and be a lawyer. still pursued art until high school but then in uni i couldn't do it because law took so many time and life is suffocating since then. once i cried when i attempted to paint (didn't do it for years) and failed because i didn't feel that spark of joy anymore (you are a fellow artist, you know what i mean by that spark)

      @yasminectrd@yasminectrd Жыл бұрын
    • I used to write everyday in high school thinking I would be an author of a novel. I even took English as my major. I still wrote in my uni days. One day, one of my professor gave a bad feedback for an essay and everything just shattered. I know that shouldn't have let one comment break me. But, it did. I've made many attempts to bring back the joy of writing, I couldn't. It's been ten years since I graduated, I sometimes miss that joy. Thank you for this comment.

      @anniesavitri@anniesavitri Жыл бұрын
    • I feel this movie relates to many art forms. I felt this mostly with music, writing, and film, all where it’s about the purpose behind it more than the story. I wanted to write songs once in my life and perform but I was held back by all the fine tuning aspects that no one would notice (my voice was too bright for one song but too warm for another, my lyrics weren’t deep enough or made no sense). I still keep those things in mind when I sing nowadays but I’m never gonna do it for money. I work in filmmaking which I love more for the process and action itself more than the end product

      @kathryndunn8052@kathryndunn8052 Жыл бұрын
  • Nice video, simple explanation, while giving the detail needed to make you see the whole picture. I normally don't like horror or suspense movies, rarely do they actually fill me with suspense or keep me on the end of my seat, but this one did. Then the messages from the antagonist rarely resonate with me, but being one that has been part of the Food industry, many of his points hit home. Then to see Margo put the clues together as you yourself, the audience, at the same time. *chef's kiss* So I love how her challenge to him, also gives him a moment to poke his head out from the sea that is the expectations he's been drowning in. Even though he is an evil SoB, by that time he is a villain that you understand where he is coming from. You don't agree with his methods, or his goals, but you understand where he is coming from.

    @talisredstar1543@talisredstar1543 Жыл бұрын
  • this was a short straight to the point packed analysis and i'm really thankful

    @haninboukhris8729@haninboukhris87298 ай бұрын
  • I hate that none of these recaps and explanations never deal with the fact that the chef also got his own comeuppance. The scene where he gets stabbed by the woman who had been rejecting his sexual advances and you realized that it was her idea to take everyone out is masterful also!

    @rockmyworldmusic@rockmyworldmusic Жыл бұрын
  • 7:31 Someone commented on a video of the cheeseburger scene that the role of an escort (though I think they meant like a courtesan rather than a prostitute) is to make the customer feel good about themselves and how that is not simply providing them with sex or with just flattering/building up/stroking their ego. It's not just empty flattery. With escorts you're paying for their company, maybe a performance but it's their company. Courtesans are or were sought after for their charm as well as their attractiveness, and they weren't just there to agree with everything the customer said. And the customers pay a lot for them allowing them to live in style. Margot didn't make Chef feel good about himself by mindlessly praising the food. She challenged him in a way that she knew he would enjoy being challenged, she drew on something she knew he enjoyed doing. She used her words and actions to affect him personally, and she got repaid for it with her life.

    @agenttheater5@agenttheater5 Жыл бұрын
    • wtf

      @limefrog@limefrog Жыл бұрын
    • @@limefrog ?

      @popsikern5848@popsikern5848 Жыл бұрын
    • That's beautiful.

      @avacadotoast5571@avacadotoast5571 Жыл бұрын
    • All women are 'escorts' ,in their own ways. The decision a man has to make is, is she worth it.

      @AwakenedAvocado@AwakenedAvocado Жыл бұрын
  • I really enjoyed the breakdown and the time that you have taken put this together. I wish to see more from you... 1 new sub 🤙😎

    @maelo9x@maelo9x Жыл бұрын
  • It was a pleasure watching two people service each other so completely.

    @invisible.fatman@invisible.fatman Жыл бұрын
    • Lol

      @baxel54230@baxel542304 күн бұрын
  • I like that in a deleted scene, it was found that he separated from all of the negativity of his life. That a couple found him and forced him back into the limelight. He moved to a remote place in Korea in a food truck making something like pancakes. This was his return to what he found as a simple pleasure of cooking everyone ruined for him. Since she is not the same as the filth of the patrons, she was someone that helped bring that positivity that was taken after he escaped. The other fact is the chef has to give the perfect meal. Denying a to go meal would have ruined his perfect revenge meal.

    @sworddomo1951@sworddomo1951 Жыл бұрын
    • Also that she litterally is just there and not a part of the plan. Killing her after she made him happy would ruin the whole premise of the dish to avenge those who ruin cooking.

      @frohawkmaster@frohawkmaster Жыл бұрын
    • Source : trust me bro

      @Lann._@Lann._ Жыл бұрын
    • @@Lann._ not too hard to KZhead it... kzhead.info/sun/ktBuma-nnWOljJ8/bejne.html

      @neltsu8634@neltsu8634 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Lann._ you can literally find the deleted scene on KZhead. It was a taco truck in Korea.

      @Charlie-pu9bx@Charlie-pu9bx Жыл бұрын
    • @@Lann._ kzhead.info/sun/ktBuma-nnWOljJ8/bejne.html trust me bro

      @adoboaddict8979@adoboaddict8979 Жыл бұрын
  • Is it insane that I actually cried when he smiled giving Margot her burger? The bitter jaded chef feels all too relatable even to someone like me who is not at all a professional honing a craft. But the appreciation and joy is palpable and hit me deeply

    @notaspacealien@notaspacealien Жыл бұрын
    • I was touched by that scene as well, this film is a lot 🙈

      @mikaelastefkova@mikaelastefkova Жыл бұрын
    • She's not a Margot.

      @user-ov2fc5sd1e@user-ov2fc5sd1e Жыл бұрын
    • It makes total sense. We all want our work, whatever that is, appreciated. We all want to do what brings us joy (whatever that is, be it hobby, work, play etc). It was a beautiful moment, albeit a dark one.

      @story3877@story3877 Жыл бұрын
    • No 🙂I think I did too as well as laugh gleefully!

      @tamauroget3950@tamauroget3950 Жыл бұрын
    • I mean, it's Ralph Fiennes after all. His performance is always top notch, I was all smiles watching that scene of him happily cooking a cheeseburger lol

      @AC-iz7eh@AC-iz7eh Жыл бұрын
  • What I found intriguing is that the chef actually had American cheese in his kitchen. While they made a point of stating that the larder was fully stocked, I can't help but wonder: under what circumstances would they ever be confronted with the need for American cheese? It would have been interesting to see what the staff ate for their "last supper". Burgers on the grill? Hot dogs with chili? Nachos?

    @iamdunat0s795@iamdunat0s79511 ай бұрын
    • or it could be he anticipated or planned just in case if someone get a change of heart. all of them are d*** but that doesn't mean they could be changed. All of them have a way to changed, like actually admitting to their guilt. Isn't a bit weird he has giftbags prepared as well just in case if he left someone actually leave the island who knows for what reasons like containing all the info to prove he is the one who committed the crime. The gift bags prove there a plan B if he allowed one or more of them to actually leave.

      @jomarcentermjm@jomarcentermjm2 ай бұрын
  • Watched this movie last night, it's amazing.Thank you for the great breakdown, it made the experience even better.

    @leen8430@leen8430 Жыл бұрын
  • I also saw it as his need to “complete the meal.” His whole performance is reliant on eta element fitting into the meal itself, and when Margot asked to take her food to go, her meal wasn’t complete, so he had to let her go. It adds to the nuance in the video that she gives back joy to him and cooking but I think that also plays a part.

    @MrMusicKid87@MrMusicKid87 Жыл бұрын
    • also it might be that she actually enjoyed the food and showed appretiation for the ingredients to not go to waste so she wanted to take it with her and finish later...remember how he said it mattered to the fish that it had to die so the guy can eat it and not even remembering what type it was even tho it was a super rare fish?

      @x340x@x340x9 ай бұрын
  • So this is what Voldemort is up to these days. Way to turn your life around Voldy. Proud of you mate.

    @benjaminletiecq4932@benjaminletiecq4932 Жыл бұрын
    • Wait that was Ralph fiennes?! Never realized that.

      @chrisg5219@chrisg5219 Жыл бұрын
    • Used to work for MI 6 too mate

      @franklyn0110@franklyn0110 Жыл бұрын
    • We don't say that name. Not here.

      @anthonyhernandez4266@anthonyhernandez4266 Жыл бұрын
    • 🤣🤣

      @josearias9002@josearias9002 Жыл бұрын
    • And you might say "He's still a mass murderer" but he let one live this time AND he's targeting people because of their actions now and not because of their genetics - that's progress! Keep on truckin' Tom! Rome wasn't built in a day.

      @jakobchristiansson@jakobchristiansson Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for making this. I didn't really get the menu. I did understand the plot of a chef losing the love for his art because of the people surrounding him and taking away his joy because of their ego and this one person that's different and gives the joy back to him before he tears apart the world that made him the man he is today, but I just didn't really get into the feeling of the movie and this video kinda showed me just how meaningful it all was. Appreciate it, really.

    @platonicriot@platonicriot Жыл бұрын
  • Brilliant analysis and adaptation. I thank you for your appreciation for film... and cheeseburgers. A simple bow. Happy New Year to you and yours.

    @KevinGoldman@KevinGoldman4 ай бұрын
  • The cheeseburger is the opposite of highbrow culinary art, and I mean that in a good way. It’s fairly cheap, easily accessible to cook, and above all it accomplishes the goal of actually satisfying your hunger sometimes even exceeding it. Margot taking it to-go puts a nice bow on the whole concept.

    @isaiahthomas6744@isaiahthomas6744 Жыл бұрын
  • I find this hinges on a similar dynamic as the ratatouille vs food critic moment in Ratatouille... taking the critic back to long-gone times when life was simpler. Pure gold in Ratatouille and pretty damn good in The Menu... Fiennes really sells it.

    @BA.77777@BA.77777 Жыл бұрын
    • You could see the joy in his eyes, hear it in his voice, even his body language/ movements are different

      @markpierce4416@markpierce4416 Жыл бұрын
    • This movie feels like the rated R 18+ version of Ratatouille. lol Ratatouille actually pays homage to french chef Bernard Louiseau who committed suicide because of the pressure he had to endure to maintain his 3 michelin stars. And the end of the Menu is a suicide pack as well. And then the flashback scene of the critic, only that it's reversed & the flashback occurs within the chef & not the customer/critic. One of the best movies I've seen in a while.

      @SquidwardLSDSquirtingOctopussy@SquidwardLSDSquirtingOctopussy10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for actually explaining, the other KZhead’s I’ve seen just basically gave a summary of a movie I’ve already watched which wasted my time. You actually explained the meaning and significance of the story.

    @mRkhong@mRkhong3 ай бұрын
  • The BEST review of the film I have seen! Thank you!

    @BilyanaTasseva@BilyanaTasseva Жыл бұрын
  • As someone with severe PTSD, who is no longer able to work, literally every single thing made sense. No one understands how much a career can be tied to somebody’s identity when it is their art form that they love the most to have it taken away from the very people that are judging them is another form of hell

    @TheHandsomeHam@TheHandsomeHam Жыл бұрын
  • Late 2021 I visited Dubai with my family, we were able to save up a little more money and went to some or less elegant places. Japanese fusion kitchen for example. The places where they actually offer 100€ steaks. And I decided for once in my life to take that opportunity. I was disappointed. The steak was a solid 8/10, a good steak but definitely not a 100€ steak, because for that, I want the best steak of my life and I certainly didn't get it. I got the best steak in my life at Ikinari Steak in Japan, a 500g Rib-Eye including side dishes and wine for 3500¥ (30€ at that time). And with every place we went my disappointment grew, expensive everywhere but nowhere was I served the experience I was basically promised when people talk about Dubai. What's my moral of the story? There are a lot of pretentious people out there that spend too much money on food that doesn't even taste better than the food you get served at your local restaurant/food places. It's really only about the names and swagger. Because without, these people would realize how much their life is truly worth. And I am convinced, the most delicious food served in that movie was that bloody cheeseburger.

    @senpafl4405@senpafl4405 Жыл бұрын
    • try some japanese wagyu a5. cook by yourself and you will be satisfied. also try yourself wagyu a 5 smash chesseburger

      @jondaan9194@jondaan9194 Жыл бұрын
    • It's basically about bragging rights I think, "I go to such-and-such expensive/exclusive place, I'm part of an upper clique/better than the common pleb" basically enjoying showing the world where they went, instead of going for the actual food then again this status-signaling motivates most of the population on so many aspects- expensive brand clothing, luxury cars that they don't even need or make use of the features they paid for (is every Lamborghini driver making use of/have a need for their high horsepower in their daily life, or even capable of without causing an accident?) etc

      @marimoerostraw@marimoerostraw Жыл бұрын
  • A man of passion, bereft of joy and empty in life. Gifted a final happiness, through his humble and honest beginnings.

    @TheMooper27@TheMooper27 Жыл бұрын
  • What a brilliant piece you, Sociocimema, have created. Never heard of this movie, however, I will watch it ASAP. Thanks.

    @ThePierre58@ThePierre5811 ай бұрын
  • It's almost emotional. We, as humans, tend to focus on the destination, the fame, the grandeur. Yet, we forget what matters, those small moments of joy that we very seldomly manage to squeeze out of the comedy of life. I almost tear up thinking of finding something, anything, that makes me feel like Slowik cooking a cheeseburger.

    @hombreg1@hombreg1 Жыл бұрын
    • no cissy no one asked have a great day

      @danielwalk1775@danielwalk1775 Жыл бұрын
  • Having worked in the "food scene" in the SF Bay area for a few years , I really appreciated the ending. How many of us just want a good burger after a fun night of drinking or with friends. I have had such a craving for a cheeseburger since I saw this movie though lol.

    @josemartinhalle7923@josemartinhalle7923 Жыл бұрын
    • i also find it kind of connecting that every culture has some kind of greasy comfort fast food. we all crave that sort of easy convinence and comfort even across continents.

      @globalgeode4363@globalgeode4363 Жыл бұрын
    • Lol I went to McDonald's and got a quarter pounder with cheese after the movie!

      @ameribrahim5405@ameribrahim5405 Жыл бұрын
    • Go to In-N-Out!

      @greengoat5654@greengoat5654 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ameribrahim5405 🤮

      @greengoat5654@greengoat5654 Жыл бұрын
    • @@greengoat5654 I know man I never said it was the best burger but it was late and the only thing open

      @ameribrahim5405@ameribrahim5405 Жыл бұрын
  • We’ve watched this movie in our introduction to film subject and reading the comments i must say y’all are great at pointing out those underlying meaning from the movie! Now, i feel like watching it again!

    @katesombria1990@katesombria1990 Жыл бұрын
  • Very thoughtful analysis! Thank you for sharing.

    @MM-co4lf@MM-co4lf Жыл бұрын
  • Damn. He didn’t just let her take the rest to go. He gave her a new one to go. That was actually touching. 😅

    @bf5209@bf5209 Жыл бұрын
    • Actually, in the very last scene, you can see she takes out the half chewed burger lol

      @theonefrancis696@theonefrancis696 Жыл бұрын
  • Nicely done! After a year of truly excellent films, this one seemed almost an embarrassment of riches. The more one looks at it, the more layers it reveals. Here's one example. An article read the guests as representatives of the seven deadly sins. The finance bros and their boss obviously represent greed, the old billionaire, lust, Tyler, gluttony. The article suggested that the critic represented envy, while the actor was pride. But I think it's possible to read those two the other way around. Chef Slowik's mother represents sloth, while Slowik himself is clearly defined as wrath. I think this reading offers a nice clarity to the characters and what motivates their desire to be at the chef's table. This fits beautifully with another reading that my friends and I came away with after our viewing was a brutal and insightful indictment of late-stage capitalism as a whole. Slowik see the system of giving and taking as fundamentally broken beyond repair. The takers' demands have no limit, because they're not feeding hunger, but these altogether darker compulsions listed above. The seven deadly sins can be interpreted as appetites. But they're the appetites of our darker natures, that nurture our emptiness rather than filling us up. Thus, this dark satire of late-stage capitalism depicts capital as the status of cuisine, the game of it, rather than the actual food itself. So when Margot (or Erin) asks to actually be fed a fair meal for a fair price, it proves to Slowik that somewhere in the world, the simple, healthy commerce of goods for services can still exist. Even if the capitalist machine has broken his spirit beyond repair, he can die with hope for a world where labor done with love is compensated with respect. In the end, that's all the vast majority of us want.

    @rottensquid@rottensquid Жыл бұрын
    • Hm, if chef Julian is a Christ-like figure that dies for our capitalistic sins, I think it makes sense that Margot (given both her name and profession) is somewhat of a Mary Magdalene.

      @TimManuelMiranda@TimManuelMiranda Жыл бұрын
    • The simplest explanation is usually the best...a 5-star chef, finally gets fed up with the intense pressure of pleasing people who can't be pleased, decides with his loyal staff/followers to go out in a blaze of glory along with some of the customers that drove him to his final "menu".

      @caronstout354@caronstout354 Жыл бұрын
    • @@caronstout354 Right, of course. All those other layers are sort of optional extras, totally unnecessary, but fun to think about.

      @rottensquid@rottensquid Жыл бұрын
    • @@TimManuelMiranda I think Chef is the opposite of a Christ-like figure. Christ was definitely capable of anger, as when he chased the merchants out of the temple (the deeper meaning of that particular act seems lost on most modern Christians, alas.) But Christ's anger was just anger, not wrath. Wrath isn't mere anger, it's hatred. Anger wants people to do better, for themselves and one another. But Wrath wishes harm on them, wishes pain and death on them. It takes pleasure in their suffering. Wrath is a sin because, unlike simple anger, it poisons the soul. So I don't think Chef Slowik was dying for anyone's sins but his own. His plan wasn't to save anyone's soul, but to punish them. That's not Christ-like at all (another thing that many modern Christians seem unclear on). And he knew that, which is why he didn't spare himself. I think the true horror of the film, like capitalism itself, is that Christ, (or for us non-religious folk, the grace that Christ represents,) is nowhere to be seen. There is no forgiveness here, no possibility of redemption. Even in Slowik's final moments, when he gets one last taste of joy in making something delicious for the enjoyment of someone else, there's no redemption for him. He's fallen too far. Or perhaps he knows that if he deserves redemption, the rest do as well, and he's too lost in wrath to forgive. That's why the film is as tragedy as well as a horror. Christ represents redemption, and this film is about damnation.

      @rottensquid@rottensquid Жыл бұрын
    • Wow!! Perfect analysis, I have to agree with you every step of the way. I was sure there was some link to the 7 deadly sins but I just couldn’t put it together myself. Beautifully said!

      @kf2405@kf2405 Жыл бұрын
  • I enjoyed your video and because of you I've found a new appreciation for the movie , so thank you

    @caleblamoure7218@caleblamoure7218 Жыл бұрын
  • That was a stunning rendition of the movie. It made me actually get chills. Good job!

    @ron1461@ron14613 ай бұрын
  • I have not seen The Menu but, thanks to your outstanding tour, I will now. I was in tears as you described the cooks simple joy at cooking a deceptively simply cheeseburger for a person who truly enjoyed it. This is the sanctum of every cook. That their sincere efforts and skill will not be judged but be appreciated by those he or she gifts with their results of their earnest work. Great video. Subscribed.

    @phil4986@phil4986 Жыл бұрын
  • Me and my family have agreed that even if we're at the fanciest restaurant and the only thing that looks good is the burger, then that's what we'll order.

    @blaisewinterhalter2758@blaisewinterhalter2758 Жыл бұрын
  • What a brilliant, brilliant idea for a film. Totally astonishing what someone has come up with about the perfectly pedestrian cheeseburger.

    @HegelsOwl@HegelsOwl Жыл бұрын
  • Ive never seen the movie... ive heard about this 'cheeseburger' thing and that it meant something but i didnt know what. So my curiosity about this lead me to start watching this video. I appreciate how you set it up for me with all the characters. i have not finished this video because i decided the movie has captured my attention to this point and want to be surprised about what the cheeseburger means for myself. thanks

    @MrShaun42088@MrShaun42088 Жыл бұрын
  • Aside from the movie being a very intriguing film, I absolutely love that the way out of a horrible death is ordering a cheeseburger. That’s a hell of a twist, right there.

    @CrungleFunk@CrungleFunk Жыл бұрын
  • This movie was honestly fantastic. The fact it inspires so much talk about what people think it meant, the smile at the end, the bond they had. It's fantastic. A sign of amazing writing and superb acting

    @thehippie3610@thehippie3610 Жыл бұрын
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