IMDb RATING
5.3/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
A celebrity chef exacts revenge on a food blogger who torpedoes his career.A celebrity chef exacts revenge on a food blogger who torpedoes his career.A celebrity chef exacts revenge on a food blogger who torpedoes his career.
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
James Le Gros
- Peter Grey
- (as James LeGros)
Roger Brenner
- Food Show Attendee
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Unlike some other capture/torture movies which focus more on torture than anything else (like an extremely overrated The Loved Ones), this one is mostly about revenge and capturer making a point. In this case one pretentious rich asshole proving another asshole what he doesn't deserve to call himself a restaraunt critic. Practically all characters in the movie are assholes except the critic's wife, so you just wish both of male leads just kill each other in some assholish 1-vs-1 standout.
It's a decent thriller with the actual story and it's interesting enough to watch it at least once. The ending is not believable, but made so for the quite ironic scene.
It's a decent thriller with the actual story and it's interesting enough to watch it at least once. The ending is not believable, but made so for the quite ironic scene.
First, I am a huge fan on Kitchen Nightmares, Hell's Kitchen, etc. I also consider myself quite the food snob. I love to cook, but would never, ever, consider doing it as a career.
All of that said, this movie is extremely clever. Not terribly original from a revenge and torture perspective, but I love the "challenges".
The low budget nature of the film makes it unlikely to ever get a major viewing; however, anyone that is a fan of food and Gordon Ramsey will truly enjoy this film.
Final thought, for a cost conscious film, the acting is actually quite good.
All of that said, this movie is extremely clever. Not terribly original from a revenge and torture perspective, but I love the "challenges".
The low budget nature of the film makes it unlikely to ever get a major viewing; however, anyone that is a fan of food and Gordon Ramsey will truly enjoy this film.
Final thought, for a cost conscious film, the acting is actually quite good.
I have seen one of Joe Maggio's previous films, Virgil Bliss, and his style of story telling appealed to be then as it does now.
Hollywood spends millions, yet Mr. Maggio can put a film together for $6,000 apparently. Wonder what they really spend the money on.
James LeGros is excellent, supported by a strong script and a good story. I liked this from the beginning until almost the end (don't want to spoil it).
Lots of interesting dialog and James LeGros' cool intensity won me over.
I don't like a lot of movies, but I certainly like this one.
Hollywood spends millions, yet Mr. Maggio can put a film together for $6,000 apparently. Wonder what they really spend the money on.
James LeGros is excellent, supported by a strong script and a good story. I liked this from the beginning until almost the end (don't want to spoil it).
Lots of interesting dialog and James LeGros' cool intensity won me over.
I don't like a lot of movies, but I certainly like this one.
I dislike "blood and guts" movies, and only saw this one because I was channel surfing, thought it was about a guy and his cooking show, and was drawn in by the time I realized its genre.
For a low budget movie, I'm surprised at how good the lead actors were, and that even though both characters were impossible to like, they had strong chemistry together and there was palpable suspense over what would happen next.
Surprisingly, the dialog was well-written, and there was some very dark comedy in there. The tasks that the captor demanded were not complicated nor incredible, but rather simply creative ways to make the critic "eat his words." Some of the negative reviews in here lament that there was not enough blood and/or guts/gore, but there was enough intensity and thrills created, without having to show every bloody detail.
I found this to be a suspenseful, well-acted independent film.
For a low budget movie, I'm surprised at how good the lead actors were, and that even though both characters were impossible to like, they had strong chemistry together and there was palpable suspense over what would happen next.
Surprisingly, the dialog was well-written, and there was some very dark comedy in there. The tasks that the captor demanded were not complicated nor incredible, but rather simply creative ways to make the critic "eat his words." Some of the negative reviews in here lament that there was not enough blood and/or guts/gore, but there was enough intensity and thrills created, without having to show every bloody detail.
I found this to be a suspenseful, well-acted independent film.
Peter Grey is a pompous, talented chef whose life is about to take a turn for the worse after an unnecessarily horrible review by blogger JT Franks. Grey's already skewed world perspective changes drastically as he resolves to kidnap Franks, torturing him with a series of seemingly simple cooking tasks.
Bitter Feast gets points for originality and gloss. The film looks quite good for an independent effort and the actors really throw themselves into the roles. They actually hired actors, not faces, to flesh out the interesting script. James Le Gros especially never goes over the top but plays the role rather subtly and Josh Lucas is excellent, being sympathetic and unsympathetic all at once. The always reliable Larry Fessenden shows up as a slimy private eye trying to locate Franks.
Don't expect your life to change, but if you're looking for a movie with some originality and panache, then dig in!
Bitter Feast gets points for originality and gloss. The film looks quite good for an independent effort and the actors really throw themselves into the roles. They actually hired actors, not faces, to flesh out the interesting script. James Le Gros especially never goes over the top but plays the role rather subtly and Josh Lucas is excellent, being sympathetic and unsympathetic all at once. The always reliable Larry Fessenden shows up as a slimy private eye trying to locate Franks.
Don't expect your life to change, but if you're looking for a movie with some originality and panache, then dig in!
Did you know
- TriviaThe poster for this movie is seen in the video game "Until Dawn" on the Playstation 4. It's found while exploring the cinema room.
- GoofsIn the forest when Peter gives JT a head start, JT stumbles into the river and heads upstream. The next JT scene shows him running - downstream. Peter arrives at the river and also turns upstream, but the very next scene shows he is moving downstream.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Until Dawn (2015)
- SoundtracksI'll Find You
Written by Oliver Benjamin Thayer
Performed by Oliver Benjamin Thayer
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $250,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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