Lasse Hallstrom’s The Hundred-Foot Journey Trailer
An Indian family moves to a small French town to open a restaurant in front of a Michelin-starred French restaurant owned by Madame Mallory, who gives them hell for it.
An Indian family moves to a small French town to open a restaurant in front of a Michelin-starred French restaurant owned by Madame Mallory, who gives them hell for it.
We’re already more than halfway through 2014, so it was time to revisit my favorite movies of last year.
I’ve put together a list of films that you are likely to, at least, be able to enjoy even if you’re not sold on musicals.
Part fairytale romance, part quirky crime mystery solving, part snarky comedy food-loving musical and more; Pushing Daisies achieved a stroke of genius uniqueness that is hardly ever going to show up on television again.
Hannibal overturns expectations of crime procedurals and Lecter incarnations by focusing on the first-hand and secondhand effects of murder on the mind.
Shiina Ringo’s latest single titled Irohanihoheto (いろはにほへと) referring to a pretty old Japanese poem that dates back a thousand years about the concepts of Buddhism, directed by Yuichi Kodama (児玉裕一).
Ten no Shizuku (天のしずく) is a documentary by Atsunori Kawamura (河邑厚徳) that follows cooking expert and essayist Yoshiko Tatsumi (辰巳芳子), considered a pioneer in home-cooking research.
Ryan Murphy provides Eat Pray Love with great visuals and scenery, but the film version of Elizabeth Gilbert’s soul-healing journey is boring.
Tim Burton’s adaptation of the popular Roald Dahl novel of the same name could have been great, but ends up a messy flick with one of Depp’s worst performances to date.