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IMDbPro

Les saveurs du Palais

  • 2012
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Jean d'Ormesson and Catherine Frot in Les saveurs du Palais (2012)
The story of Danièle Delpeuch and how she was appointed as the private chef for François Mitterrand.
Play trailer1:21
1 Video
13 Photos
BiographyComedy

The story of Danièle Delpeuch and how she was appointed as the private chef for François Mitterrand.The story of Danièle Delpeuch and how she was appointed as the private chef for François Mitterrand.The story of Danièle Delpeuch and how she was appointed as the private chef for François Mitterrand.

  • Director
    • Christian Vincent
  • Writers
    • Etienne Comar
    • Christian Vincent
    • Danièle Mazet-Delpeuch
  • Stars
    • Catherine Frot
    • Arthur Dupont
    • Jean d'Ormesson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Christian Vincent
    • Writers
      • Etienne Comar
      • Christian Vincent
      • Danièle Mazet-Delpeuch
    • Stars
      • Catherine Frot
      • Arthur Dupont
      • Jean d'Ormesson
    • 20User reviews
    • 57Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:21
    Trailer #1

    Photos13

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    Top cast52

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    Catherine Frot
    Catherine Frot
    • Hortense Laborie
    Arthur Dupont
    Arthur Dupont
    • Nicolas Bauvois
    Jean d'Ormesson
    • Le Président
    Hippolyte Girardot
    Hippolyte Girardot
    • David Azoulay
    Jean-Marc Roulot
    • Jean-Marc Luchet
    Philippe Uchan
    Philippe Uchan
    • Coche-Dury
    Laurent Poitrenaux
    • Jean-Michel Salomé
    Hervé Pierre
    Hervé Pierre
    • Perrières
    • (as Hervé Pierre de La Comédie Française)
    Brice Fournier
    • Pascal Lepiq
    Roch Leibovici
    • Olivier Moncoulon
    Thomas Chabrol
    Thomas Chabrol
    • Le directeur de cabinet du préfet
    Arly Jover
    Arly Jover
    • La journaliste Mary
    Joe Sheridan
    Joe Sheridan
    • Le photographe John
    Louis-Emmanuel Blanc
    • Arnaud Fremier
    David Houri
    • David Epenot
    Nicolas Chupin
    • Anthony
    Pierre Moure
    Pierre Moure
    • Guillaume
    Steve Tran
    • Grégory
    • Director
      • Christian Vincent
    • Writers
      • Etienne Comar
      • Christian Vincent
      • Danièle Mazet-Delpeuch
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.47K
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    Featured reviews

    Mozjoukine

    French Foodie drama.

    The subject is OK and unfamiliar and 'Scope Eastmancolor production values are handsome - the close-ups of food are near obscenely gorgeous.

    Catharine Frot and the cast (largely unfamiliar abroad, even with Hipolyte Gyradot in there) impress though the eighty five year old TV personality fronting as President of the French Republic does seem a bit too fragile and we have to wonder about the accent of the Australian TV reporter pursuing Catharine. The Elysses Palace and the remote Iceland expedition are intriguingly shown.

    However we are left wanting the revelation, which they build up cross cutting the two situations, and it never arrives, stopping this from being more than a pleasant enough offering for the LADIES IN LAVENDER audience.
    7gregorybnyc

    Catherine Frot is a Magical Screen Presence

    I've only seen Catherine Frot in one other movie--Coline Serreau's stunningly complicated CHAOS and she was marvelous. So when HAUTE CUISINE showed up on Netflix, I jumped at it. I love movies about food--WHO IS KILLING THE GREAT CHEFS OF EUROPE?, BIG NIGHT, MOSTLY MARTHA, EAT DRINK MAN WOMAN, BABETTE'S FEAST. They almost always manage to find humanity, absurdity and gently funny moments associated with food. Based on the real story of the first female chef who comes to cook for President Mitterand at the Elysee Palace, HAUTE CUSINE is a sweetly earnest story of Hortense Laborie, a fine French cook who is pulled away from her truffle farm in France to become the personal chef of the French president. Along the way she will encounter the petty and mean-spirited competition from the all-male kitchen that serves the palace, as she works tirelessly to provide the President with the foods he remembers from his childhood. The story is told in flashbacks as Hortense s finishing up a year-long stint as a cook for a research group in Anartica.

    What makes the film work is the casting of Catherine Frot as Hortense. This superb actress gives Hortense a tense, focused and convincing believability. Horrtense arouses total loyalty from her sous chef and maitre'd as the palace personalities around her make life often rather difficult. Losing her calm only once, Frot has a confrontation in the movie that is a very satisfying answer to the pettiness she is surrounded by at the Palace. It is in stark contrast to the grateful affection she is shown by the men she cooks for every day in coldly forbidding Anartica.

    HAUTE CUISINE is a quiet film of disarming charm. It doesn't break new ground, but it is a very satisfying movie which Catherine Frot at its center. Some have complained here that is a trifle and I'm not entirely disagreeing, but it is a movie worth seeing. I know I'll be seeing it again.
    8richard-1787

    A delicious movie

    No one is going to nominate this as one of the 10 greatest movies of x. There is nothing cutting edge here, etc.

    It is, however, an interesting story well told and very well acted, especially by Catherine Frot, who seems to do everything well. I've seen it twice now, and never once looked at my watch. It really holds you.

    In part, of course, it is because it presents what is now, at least in part, a dying part of traditional French culture: a respect for food in all its potential richness, and a willingness to spend the time necessary to make and appreciate it. The meals that Hortense prepares aren't frou-frou. They don't, as the president says at one point, have little sugar roses on them. It's not how clever it looks.

    It's how interesting the mixture of tastes are, an attention to taste and the freshness of ingredients that is necessary for those tastes, that French tradition holds to have been the gift of every good grandmother - NOT of expensive Parisian restaurants.

    This could be compared to the wonderful but very American movie *Ratatouille*. Near the end of that, the evil food critic Anton Ego goes into ecstasy over a portion of ratatouille because it evokes the ratatouille that his mother used to make. A pretty simple dish. Not, granted, mac and cheese, but still, not complicated.

    The dishes Hortense makes for le président, which repeatedly evoke memories of childhood, are NOT simple. They require both a lot of time and a lot of technique/knowledge regarding their preparation. That French grandmother did not make them in 15 minutes, but rather several hours, or even days for the preparation. It is, in short, a different vision of how grandmother spent her time, one that in each case is, I suspect, filtered through the values of the respective cultures. (TIME and KNOWLEDGE make for good food, vs. love makes for good food.)

    I don't know if this all comes through in English subtitles. My copy of the film has no subtitles. But it's definitely worth a viewing. It didn't make me hungry - I can't imagine having access to such meals here in the U.S. - but it did emphasize that, even for a bunch of young Frenchmen such as those at the French base in Antarctica, there is still a respect for time and skill in food preparation that is one of the distinguishing hallmarks of French culture.
    7d-seymore

    Charming characters

    Part of the appeal that drew me into beginning to watch this movie was the thought that it may have a bit of a show detailing some of the more eclectic french cuisine. While there was a bit of that, the food was definitely not as big of a character in the picture as I had assumed.

    We get to see the side of the main character, Hortense, that is a dedicated chef and detail oriented person. And the real treat of the movie is watching that personality deal with the challenge of being the executive private chef.

    Overall, the characters in this movie really make it special. And while the pace of the movie is very even, and almost predictable, it is still a special slice of life type movie that I walked away from uplifted.
    7guy-bellinger

    Ah, the tastes they are a-changin'

    It is a strange thing that food and the movies go so well together. Strange because the show on a screen of food being prepared or being consumed should be anything but palatable insofar as it can be seen but not tasted or even smelled. And yet, the eating process, whether it is the main subject of a movie ('Babette's Feast', 'Eat Drink Man Woman', 'A Chef in Love', among others) or only an incidental feature (most strikingly so in nearly all of Hitchcock or Chabrol's thrillers), is not far from being a guarantee of quality. The reason may lie in the fact that directors who choose as their heroes characters cooking or eating refined food also vote for what is associated with it: the art of living ; as a matter of fact hedonism is a notion that passes directly from authors to viewers without the disadvantage of frustration. Whatever the explanation, the rule is verified once again with "Les Saveurs du Palais", eclectic French filmmaker Christian Vincent's last opus. The main theme is of course haute cuisine, which would have been enough to make a good film, but the good news is that there is even more to "Les saveurs du Palais" than that. Not only will this fine movie make your mouth water but it will also give you food... for thought!

    The story, somewhat loosely adapted from Danièle Delpeuch's memoirs, concerns Hortense Laborie (as Delpeuch is renamed in the film), French President François Mitterand's personal chef from 1988 to 1990. The chronicle of the two and a half years she spent in the kitchens of the Elysée Palace allow Christian Vincent to tell a multi-layered tale : "Les Saveurs du Palais" does not simply bear witness to the mastery of its hero's art of cooking it also makes the viewer discover little- tread territory (the presidential cooks' machismo, the rivalry between the Elysée Palace's two restaurant services, the new supremacy of technocrats who favor budget cuts over creativity, the tastes changing with the passing of time, the rather pathetic portrait of a President at the end of his rope). Continued interest is therefore ensured. The construction in flashback form is interesting and the direction good without being ostentatious. But what really determines the success of the film is the choice of its star, Catherine Frot. The actress is indeed just perfect in her role: she is every inch Hortense Laborie and arouses immediate identification. Another added value is Arthur Dupont in the role of her assistant. The young performer displays a very likable charm, made of bashfulness mixed with irony. The "couple" he forms with Catherine Frot is simply irresistible. To make a long story short, "Les saveurs du palais" is both a sensual and intelligent movie that will delight wide audiences. And I presume that you will be in that number. And that is not all, you can even double your pleasure by... having your meal AFTER seeing Christian Vincent's little treat, instead of BEFORE. Such a move will doubtless give an Elysian taste to what otherwise would have been mere food!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film is loosely based on "Mes carnets de cuisine. Du Périgord à l'Elysée", the memories of Danièle Delpeuch, the first and only female chef having worked for the French President at the Palais de l'Elysée
    • Connections
      Featured in La noche de...: La cocinera del presidente (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Paroles, Paroles
      (Parole, Parole)

      Music by Gianni Ferrio

      Italian lyrics by Leo Chiosso and Giancarlo Del Re

      French lyrics by Michaële

      (c) 1972 Edizioni Curci Srl / Music Union Srl

      Avec l'aimable autorisation de CURCI France

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 19, 2012 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Haute Cuisine
    • Filming locations
      • Reykhólar, Iceland(as Crozet Island)
    • Production companies
      • Vendôme Production
      • France 2 Cinéma
      • Wild Bunch
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $217,883
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $14,387
      • Sep 22, 2013
    • Gross worldwide
      • $11,509,942
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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