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Eating - Le dernier secret des femmes

Original title: Eating
  • 1990
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
337
YOUR RATING
Eating - Le dernier secret des femmes (1990)
Theatrical Trailer from Rainbow Film Company
Play trailer2:46
1 Video
5 Photos
ComedyDrama

A group of young and middle-aged women gather for the birthday party of a friend and talk about their lives and food they cook for their husbands, boyfriends, or themselves.A group of young and middle-aged women gather for the birthday party of a friend and talk about their lives and food they cook for their husbands, boyfriends, or themselves.A group of young and middle-aged women gather for the birthday party of a friend and talk about their lives and food they cook for their husbands, boyfriends, or themselves.

  • Director
    • Henry Jaglom
  • Writer
    • Henry Jaglom
  • Stars
    • Frances Bergen
    • Lisa Blake Richards
    • Nelly Alard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    337
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Henry Jaglom
    • Writer
      • Henry Jaglom
    • Stars
      • Frances Bergen
      • Lisa Blake Richards
      • Nelly Alard
    • 7User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Eating
    Trailer 2:46
    Eating

    Photos4

    View Poster
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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Frances Bergen
    Frances Bergen
    • Whitney
    Lisa Blake Richards
    Lisa Blake Richards
    • Helene
    • (as Lisa Richards)
    Nelly Alard
    • Martine
    Mary Crosby
    Mary Crosby
    • Kate
    Gwen Welles
    Gwen Welles
    • Sophie
    Elizabeth Kemp
    Elizabeth Kemp
    • Nancy
    Marina Gregory
    • Lydia
    Daphna Kastner
    • Jennifer
    Marlena Giovi
    • Sadie
    Beth Grant
    Beth Grant
    • Carla
    Taryn Power
    Taryn Power
    • Anita
    Catherine Genender
    • Lily
    Hildy Brooks
    Hildy Brooks
    • Mary
    Jackie O'Brien
    Jackie O'Brien
    • Janet
    • (as Jacqueline Woolsey)
    Sherry Boucher
    Sherry Boucher
    • Maria
    • (as Sherry Boucher-Lytle)
    Savannah Smith Boucher
    Savannah Smith Boucher
    • Eloise
    Aloma Ichinose
    • Joanna
    Toni Basil
    Toni Basil
    • Jackie
    • Director
      • Henry Jaglom
    • Writer
      • Henry Jaglom
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    6.2337
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    Featured reviews

    7wisewebwoman

    Too much, too many, too repetitive

    Too many actresses - it was very confusing being inside Henry Jaglom's head. This mockumentary style movie obsesses on food and women all intertwined with sexuality.

    Even Frances Bergen who plays a type of baffled sane matriarch looks as if she has had her problems with food in the past but in this movie she is astonished at the obsessive compulsive behaviour around food at this party she attends for her daughter's fortieth birthday.

    Maybe she doesn't get out much in the shallow body-and-youth culture that is California. I would say that Henry was deliberate in keeping this movie without any depth. He just stockpiled it with far too many women (I lost track, they all looked vaguely alike and whined in the same sad key).

    Go read a book, ladies, visit an art gallery, recite poetry, read for the blind. Far too much time on your hands. Get interesting. Maybe that was the point?

    7 out of 10 for its daring - though it had to be a flop at the box-office.
    2wendy-01150

    So bad.

    I actually waited years to watch this film. What a disappointment. It should have been 5 minutes long and it must have had an elementary teacher's budget because the acting is well...bad. It's so bad, you can't tell if it's scripted or not. Nelly Alard as Martine, the French guest filming all this whining, is the only actual talent among the bunch. I'm not even going to count Frances Bergen. She shouldn't even be there. Why in the world did she agree to do this? The point that women are obsessed with food and eating (yes, they're two different things) and obsessed with every square inch of our bodies, and our mothers affect how we feel about food, eating, and every square inch of our bodies, is established and then beaten to death multiple times. I wouldn't have been able to abide long with any of these women. I wanted to slap them. I forced myself to watch it to the end and this is the only film review I've ever posted, I think. But then I'm really hungry right now so I may have and just forgotten.
    scrybbler

    turgid, sexist, self-indulgent, and boring

    Travesties like this give indie film a bad name.

    Jagblom had his cast improvise most of the material, with a rough scripted story structure. Sometimes this works; here, it's a dismal failure.

    The riffing about weight gets old fast, and is laughably preposterous to anyone who isn't an LA actress (i.e., most of his cast). Jagblom's "woman-sensitive" directing is almost immediately exposed as lecherous posturing, as his beautiful star is trotted out topless for no reason within the first 15 mins. Nice rack, Henry, but what about the movie?!?

    Worst of all, it's just horribly boring. None of the characters seem worth following, and the film does a terrible job focusing on a few so you can get a toehold on some drama. For comparison, I enjoy female-friendly films like "Mystic Pizza," "Moonstruck" and "Clueless." I love foreign films. I would've walked out on "Eating", but sadly it was a rental.

    Central conflict? Woman vs. pastry. Cinematography? Bland and undistinguished. Best use for Eating? Doorstop.
    10elisereid-29666

    Wow...

    I saw this for the first time last night, and that is all I can say...wow. This is an incredible symphony of an emotional movie. The fact that I, too, have a history of an eating disorder really brought out my emotions for it (though some who suffer from this disease may find it triggering-I found it cathartic). The sympathy shown for the characters, especially Nelly Alard, is nothing short of extraordinary. It's even more incredible to me when you consider that it was made by a man.

    There isn't a whole lot in the way of plot, but that actually works to the movie's advantage, allowing it to focus on the characters, who drive the film. At times it is hard to follow what's going on, but that makes it all the more real to me-it gives the feeling of actually being at the party being shown.

    Some may find Henry Jaglom's style to be on the indulgent side, but given the subject matter, (for me anyway) it was appropriate here. I was unfamiliar with most of his body of work before seeing this (I had only seen his segment in "Movie Madness", which he later disowned), but my interest is now piqued and I will seek out more of his films if I can.
    8ASuiGeneris

    Docufiction Regarding Eating Disorders

    "Eating" is actually very serious- the tagline reads, "A very serious comedy about women & food"- but while there are indeed some funny moments and comedic elements, it feels a little disrespectful to label something that offers important and relevant truths about a mental disorder that continue to kill over 10,000 victims a year as "comedy".

    This is one part narrative about the party like the synopsis states, but at least fifty percent is a docufiction on eating disorders. Since docufiction by definition is a hybrid of both documentary and narrative elements, it would be as accurate to call the entire film a docufiction. By having one of the main characters be a French documentarian that has come to the party with over 30 young to middle aged women in order to aquire interview material where she asks the blunt opening question, "Do you have a problem with food?", the transitions alternating between the narrative elements (the fictional party; guests arriving, exchanging gifts, socializing around the pool; characters exhibiting their disordered eating; characters gossiping about men, their infidelities, sex, and food) and the documentary ones (the women's interviews- women talking directly to the audience about their struggles with food, the obsessiveness, the power it has over their lives, the relationship they had with did in childhood, how food shapes their identities, and often the pain and torture food has causes and continues to cause in their daily lives) are almost seamless.

    While the fictional gossiping can begin to feel pretentious and whiny, one must remember that this is likely what would occur in real life. Put 30 women with no men in a house together, things are about to get catty and dramatic. And that gossiping is going to be inevitable! Now, we may not want to actually watch this as entertainment, but that would be realism for you.

    It is easy to see why "Eating" will not be everyone's cup of tea. Featuring an exclusively female cast, it can feel melodramatic and even cloying to some, and there is no meaningful plot to follow. However, even if not a complete story, we do get the opportunity to get to know the various neurotic women and the are a few we get to know well enough to wonder what will become of their stories. More importantly, although it may utilize a more roundabout and unique method, it offers all audiences valuable information regarding disordered eating- maybe especially for women, but most definitely also for men (statistics have shown anywhere from 1/4 to 1/3 eating disorder victims to be male, but there is a significant chance that this is a low estimate, given multiple factors including misdiagnosis, stigma, underreporting). In fact, it is this very denial and stigma that males cannot and therefore do not have eating disorders and problems with food that says it is even more essential that the males out there watch this!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      After a successful stint in many television roles, this was one of the first feature films in which renowned character actress Beth Grant appeared before her roles in hit movies such as Speed (1994), Le Droit de tuer ? (1996), Little Miss Sunshine (2006), and The Artist (2011)
    • Connections
      Featured in Who Is Henry Jaglom? (1995)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 20, 1991 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Eating
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles County, California, USA(Location)
    • Production companies
      • Jagfilm
      • The Rainbow Film Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,100,538
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $12,764
      • Nov 18, 1990
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,100,538
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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