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IMDbPro

What's Cooking?

  • 2000
  • PG-13
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3K
YOUR RATING
Julianna Margulies, Joan Chen, Mercedes Ruehl, Kyra Sedgwick, and Alfre Woodard in What's Cooking? (2000)
Four families in LA of different ethnicity (Latino, Asian/Vietnamese, African and Jewish) gather together for Thanksgiving dinner.
Play trailer2:28
1 Video
15 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

Four families in LA of different ethnicity (Latino, Asian/Vietnamese, African and Jewish) gather together for Thanksgiving dinner.Four families in LA of different ethnicity (Latino, Asian/Vietnamese, African and Jewish) gather together for Thanksgiving dinner.Four families in LA of different ethnicity (Latino, Asian/Vietnamese, African and Jewish) gather together for Thanksgiving dinner.

  • Director
    • Gurinder Chadha
  • Writers
    • Gurinder Chadha
    • Paul Mayeda Berges
  • Stars
    • Joan Chen
    • Julianna Margulies
    • Mercedes Ruehl
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gurinder Chadha
    • Writers
      • Gurinder Chadha
      • Paul Mayeda Berges
    • Stars
      • Joan Chen
      • Julianna Margulies
      • Mercedes Ruehl
    • 57User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:28
    Official Trailer

    Photos14

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Joan Chen
    Joan Chen
    • Trinh Nguyen
    Julianna Margulies
    Julianna Margulies
    • Carla
    Mercedes Ruehl
    Mercedes Ruehl
    • Elizabeth Avila
    Victor Rivers
    Victor Rivers
    • Javier Avila
    Douglas Spain
    Douglas Spain
    • Anthony Avila
    Maria Carmen
    Maria Carmen
    • Sofia Avila
    Isidra Vega
    Isidra Vega
    • Gina Avila
    Elena Lopez
    • Grandma Avila
    A Martinez
    A Martinez
    • Daniel
    Richard Yniguez
    Richard Yniguez
    • Robert Avila
    Lorraine Perez
    • Auntie Delores
    Eva Rodriguez
    • Auntie Eva
    Adrian Armas
    Adrian Armas
    • Avila Cousin
    Caz
    • Gordo
    François Chau
    François Chau
    • Duc Nguyen
    • (as Francois Chau)
    Will Yun Lee
    Will Yun Lee
    • Jimmy Nguyen
    Kristy Wu
    Kristy Wu
    • Jenny Nguyen
    Brennan Louie
    • Joey Nguyen
    • Director
      • Gurinder Chadha
    • Writers
      • Gurinder Chadha
      • Paul Mayeda Berges
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews57

    6.83K
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    Featured reviews

    molly-45649

    Wonderful and heartwarming!

    Really wonderful movie about families and communities from different cultures and backgrounds gathering for Thanksgiving dinner. I thought that each of their stories were very interesting and showed how much each family could be dysfunctional in their own way. Would definitely recommend!
    lou-50

    Food fight

    What a grand idea - to celebrate America and also to highlight cultural diversity, let's have an African-American, Hispanic, Jewish, and Vietnamese family all meet at Thanksgiving with their own turkey feast. "What's Cooking" starts out as a meaningful discourse on our ethnic differences but ends up as a superficial, patronizing mess. Using food as a focal point, "What's Cooking" could have reveal much about the importance of family to these four cultures. Instead, we are treated to silly plots (do you really believe all four families lived in the same block) and four equally sanitized endings to some very difficult contemporary problems - acculturation, same-sex relationships, infidelity, and racial prejudice. The filmmakers also casted big name stars in misplaced roles to gain commercial success at the risk of losing its credibility - Joan Chen as Vietnamese, Mercedes Ruehl as Hispanic, and Kyra Sedgwick and Julianna Margulies as a lesbian couple. You think back on "Babette's Feast", "Like Water for Chocolate", and "The Big Night" and you feel connected to food as an overpowering statement on human passion and compassion. In "What's Cooking", food is treated no better than the commercial that adorns the city bus. Fittingly the film takes places in Los Angeles where people there could stomach this Pablum as real food. Fortunately, for the rest of us, we can spot a fake even if it looks like an old-fashioned turkey.
    9steve.schonberger

    a delicious comedy

    This movie is a comedy about the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday. It follows four families (black, Latino, Jewish, and Vietnamese) during their holiday celebrations, with all the messes that crop up during big family gatherings. Each of the families has its own problems, which are to some extent intertwined.

    An example of one of the family messes: A young man in the Latino family bumps into his father (who had moved out some time earlier) at the grocery store, and invites him to Thanksgiving dinner. His mother is furious, because she doesn't want anything to do with her estranged husband, particularly during a big holiday event.

    The acting and directing are very good, but the writing and editing are really wonderful. The cast is huge, but the editing manages to make it easy for the audience to keep track of everyone. It's full of laughs (and some light drama), but aside from some stereotyping, mostly realistic. Even though there are quite a number of name actors, the screen time is divided among the cast to fit the story, not to fit the actors' egos -- an impressive balancing act for the director and producers.

    The food scenes, aside from a few kitchen disasters, were enough to inspire quite an appetite. It's a good thing the Seattle International Film Festival scheduled the screening in the afternoon, so I could have dinner right after the movie.

    This is one of the best recent comedies I've seen.
    10arataman-139

    Comfort food with controversy... but the kind of movie you can watch any day of the year!

    With the exception of A WALK ON THE MOON starring Diane Lane and Viggo Mortensen, this film is easily my favorite indie film. I first saw it four years ago when my sister was home from San Diego state for Easter vacation and we rented the DVD the following day from Blockbuster. Some of the most talented names in film (Oscar-nominee Alfre Woodard, Oscar-winner Mercedes Rheul, Lainie Kazan and Joan Chen) and up-and-coming talent (Dennis Haysbert of FAR FROM HEAVEN and the ALLSTATE commercials) star in this terrific ensemble film with a brilliant script and first-rate performances most notably from Woodard, Rheul and Kyra Segewick.

    The story (set throughout the Fairfax district of L.A.) revolves around four different families (focusing primarily on the women of each) all of four different ethnicities: one African-American, one Hispanic, one Jewish and one Vietnamese and the family conflicts they deal with over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. Woodard's family is dealing with a marriage that is on the brink of a divorce with two subplots of an extremely irritating mother-in-law (Ann Weldon) and a troubled son in his early twenties; Rheul's family is confronting the fact that she has separated from her husband (Victor Rivers) and has moved on with her life and has a promising relationship with her boyfriend (A Martinez) despite what her son wants. Kazan's family is up in arms with her daughter (Segewick) involved in a lesbian relationship with her recently married life-partner (Julianna Margulies). Chen's family is most definitely the most dysfunctional while their daughter is involved in a relationship with a young white boy, their eldest son uses his midterms schedule as a false pretense to avoid coming home for the holidays and is seeing Rhuel's daughter and Chen's teenage son has been suspended from school for stealing a test while also being dangerously involved with a gang. One highlight of the films is where Woodard's friends come over to her house for Thanksgiving dinner and their rebellious, uptight teenage daughter wants nothing to do with any of them. When confronted by Woodard's mother-in-law about what she and Woodard's little daughter and her friend are doing, she states that "we're playing Thanksgiving... she's the mommy, she's the daddy and I'm the alcoholic, cult-worshiping, Satanic stepmother!"

    The story moves in a very transitional pattern alternating between the four families with very interesting scenarios for each. Gurinder Chadha (director of BEND IT LIKE BEKHAM and the upcoming BRIDE AND PREJUDICE) has really outdone herself with the unique and oft-times exasperating ties that bring these families together. Another engaging aesthetic in this film (possibly the most important) is the incredibly diverse variety of delicious food each family cooks throughout the midsection of the film in preparation for the holiday tradition. You can almost smell the enticing scents of the apple and pumpkin pies and the turkey and mashed potatoes as well as the Asian and Hispanic dishes. The special features on the DVD of the films offers six different recipes as they were used in the actual film.

    This is one film that my whole family and I love to watch every year on Thanksgiving and one we watch throughout the year as well. Go rent it sometime this weekend and see what you think. I really think you'll love it!
    6=G=

    WARNING! Do not watch on an empty stomach.

    "What's Cooking" is yet another film which shows a short period of time in the lives of multiple disconnected characters who have something in common. In "Magnolia" the common denominator was proximity. In "All the Rage" it was guns. In "The Five Senses" is was senses. Etc. Etc. Etc. In "What's Cooking" it's food....Thanksgiving Day dinner.

    "What's Cooking" has superb casting, direction, script/screenplay, etc. However it has one huge problem which it shares with other films of this ilk: Too many characters and too little time with which to develop them sufficient to create that all important bond with the audience. The result is a herky-jerky story flow and a disconnected audience which is reduced to pure voyeurism. Too busy and too superficial.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Rachel's mom, Ruth, spills coffee onto the saucer of the 4th cup. She puts spoons on all 4 saucers without cleaning the spilled coffee.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas/Red Planet/What's Cooking?/Bounce/Rugrats in Paris (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      Wouldn't It Be Nice
      (1966)

      Written by Brian Wilson, Tony Asher and Mike Love

      Copyright 1966, renewed 1967 Irving Music, Inc. (BMI)

      International copyright secured

      Performed and Produced by Dan Russell

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    FAQ19

    • How long is What's Cooking??Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 1, 2000 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • Vietnamese
      • Yiddish
    • Also known as
      • What's Cooking
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Because Entertainment
      • Flashpoint (I)
      • Hope and Gravy Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,045,899
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $144,586
      • Nov 19, 2000
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,698,759
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 49m(109 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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