What's Cooking? (film)
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (October 2014) |
What's Cooking? | |
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Directed by | Gurinder Chadha |
Written by | Gurinder Chadha Paul Mayeda Berges |
Produced by | Jeffrey Taylor Ethan Hurt |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Jong Lin |
Edited by | Janice Hampton |
Music by | Craig Pruess |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Trimark Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 109 minutes |
Countries | United Kingdom United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $1,649,655 |
What's Cooking? is a 2000 British/American comedy-drama film directed by Gurinder Chadha and starring Mercedes Ruehl, Kyra Sedgwick, Joan Chen, Lainie Kazan, Maury Chaykin, Julianna Margulies, Alfre Woodard, and Dennis Haysbert.
Plot
On Thanksgiving day, four ethnically diverse families -- Vietnamese, Latino, Jewish, and African American — gather for the traditional meal. Each family has its own distinct way of cooking the traditional holiday meal and its own set of problems.
Ruth and Herb Seelig (Lainie Kazan and Maury Chaykin) welcome their daughter Rachel (Kyra Sedgwick) home for the holiday. Rachel brings her lesbian lover Carla (Julianna Margulies), much to Mom and Dad's discomfiture. Additional relatives, not yet clued in, are scheduled to drop by.
Trin and Duc Nguyen (Joan Chen and François Chau) have just had their son ejected from school. If that isn't enough, Trin has found a condom among her daughter's possessions. And her son isn't bothering to attend the gala affair at all, but is secretly going to the home of his Latino girlfriend at the Avilas.
Mrs. Elizabeth Avila (Mercedes Ruehl) is separated from her husband Javier (Victor Rivers) since he had a tempestuous affair with her cousin. Unbeknownst to Elizabeth, son Tony (Douglas Spain) has invited Papa over for the holiday meal as he has nowhere else to go. Unbeknownst to Tony, Mom has her own bombshell to drop. And, of course, the Avila daughter, Sofia (Maria Carmen), has invited her non-Latino boyfriend.
In the meantime, Audrey Williams (Alfre Woodard) must both cook and make nice with her overly critical mother-in-law, Grace (Ann Weldon), while the former's husband, Ronald (Dennis Haysbert), referees. The state of the couple's marriage is tense, and their teenage son, Michael (Eric George), isn't expected to appear for unstated reasons, which perhaps is just as well as Ronald's approval rating of his boy is at an all-time low.
Cast
- Mercedes Ruehl as Elizabeth "Lizzy" Avila
- Kyra Sedgwick as Rachel Seelig
- Joan Chen as Trinh Nguyen
- Lainie Kazan as Ruth "Ruthie" Seelig
- Maury Chaykin as Herb "Herbie" Seelig
- Julianna Margulies as Carla
- Alfre Woodard as Audrey Williams
- Dennis Haysbert as Ronald Williams
- Gregory Itzin as James Moore
- Estelle Harris as Aunt Bea
- Kieu Chinh as Grandma Nguyen
- Kam Fong
Reception
Reviews were mixed. Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 52% based on reviews from 66 critics, with the site's consensus stating that the film is well-acted, but the scenes sometimes sink into melodrama as characters scream at each other, and the movie as a whole is too lightweight and forgettable."[1]
The film grossed $1,649,655.[citation needed]
References
External links
- 2000 films
- 2000s comedy-drama films
- American comedy films
- American films
- American LGBT-related films
- British films
- British LGBT-related films
- Films directed by Gurinder Chadha
- Lesbian-related films
- Lions Gate Entertainment films
- Cooking films
- British drama films
- American comedy-drama films
- Screenplays by Paul Mayeda Berges
- Screenplays by Gurinder Chadha
- Trimark Pictures films