
2007 · Marcos Jorge
In a dog-eat-dog world, Raimundo Nonato has found an alternative way to move ahead: he cooks. No matter what social strata this deceptively innocent young man inhabits, he hones his skills and sharpens his knives—and then he falls in love. Jorge's nimble comic fable provides a smartly constructed gastronomic allegory for ambition and survival.
dir. Marcos Jorge · 2007
Marcos Jorge's debut, a Brazil–Italy coproduction adapted from Lusa Silvestre's short story, is a fable about cooking as the universal solvent of power. Raimundo Nonato, an illiterate migrant played with sly innocence by João Miguel, discovers he has a gift: first frying coxinhas at a grimy snack bar, then rising through an Italian restaurant kitchen, and — in the film's braided second timeline — cooking his way up the hierarchy of a crowded prison cell, where a well-seasoned meal buys protection. Jorge intercuts the two ascents with a watchmaker's patience, letting us wonder how a man travels from sauté station to cellblock, and folds in a love story with Fabiula Nascimento's pragmatic prostitute, who takes her payment in dinners. The film swept Brazil's festival circuit and took the top prize at Rio, announcing a wry comic voice in a national cinema then dominated by favela realism. Its politics arrive on a plate: at every altitude of society, whoever controls the food controls the room.
Lines of influence