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{{About|the 1988 film|the cooking show|Consuming Passions (TV series)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2021}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2012}}
{{Original research|article|date=September 2008}}
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[[Category:Films about chocolate]]
[[Category:Films about chocolate]]
[[Category:Films scored by Richard Hartley (composer)]]
[[Category:Films scored by Richard Hartley (composer)]]
{{1980s-UK-comedy-film-stub}}

Latest revision as of 09:52, 20 July 2024

Consuming Passions
File:Consuming Passions FilmPoster.jpeg
Directed byGiles Foster
Written byPaul D. Zimmerman
Andrew Davies
(from a play Secrets
by Michael Palin and
Terry Jones)
Produced byWilliam P. Cartlidge
Starring
CinematographyRoger Pratt
Edited byJohn Grover
Music byRichard Hartley
Distributed byVestron Pictures[1]
Running time
98 min
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Consuming Passions is a 1988 black comedy film which stars Vanessa Redgrave, Jonathan Pryce, and Sammi Davis and was directed by Giles Foster. The film is based on Secrets by Michael Palin and Terry Jones,[2] a BBC television play broadcast in 1973.

In the film, a chocolate factory accidentally released a new luxury product which contained human flesh. When the product turns into a surprise sales hit, the factory's owners decide to market their products to cannibals and to keep acquiring human corpses as key ingredients.

Synopsis

The film tells the story of a chocolate factory preparing to launch a new luxury range, Passionelles. However, during the production run a worker falls into a vat of chocolate and dies, meaning human flesh is present in the first batch released.

The horrified owners try and fail to recall the chocolates, but when they go on sale, they prove a surprise hit. Keen to continue the success, the developers try to replicate the taste with animal meat, but this fails miserably - leading them to realise human flesh is the key ingredient, and going to extreme lengths to obtain dead bodies to use in the chocolate.

Cast


Critical reception

In his review of the film in The New York Times, critic Vincent Canby asked "How could such a promisingly funny idea, and so many talented, intelligent people, have combined to make a film so breathlessly lame?", that "the misuse of Miss Redgrave defines just about everything that's wrong with [the film]," and "only Mr. Pryce [...] gives a consistently comic performance."[3] Writing in The Washington Post, Desson Howe noted that the film "is kept bubbling by Foster's fast pace, and hysterically oddball performances by Vanessa Redgrave, Jonathan Pryce and Sammi Davis."[4] Critic Michael Wilmington wrote in the Los Angeles Times that that film was "erratic but sometimes hilarious," that "to make a story like this work, you need to play it unafraid and full throttle, and [the film], unfortunately, has been pushed only to half," but that "there’s a refreshingly moral notion behind [the film]: an attack on the inhumanity of some modern corporate decisions."[5]

The Time Out Film Guide describes the 'recipe' for this film and concludes that of the result: "the consistency should be lumpy and the taste insipid."[6]

References

  1. ^ "Consuming Passions (1988)". BBFC. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  2. ^ John Walker (ed) Halliwell's Film and Video Guide 2000, London: HarperCollins, 1999, p. 177
  3. ^ Canby, Vincent. "Review/Film; British Satire Takes On Capitalism and Takeovers". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2024-01-24.
  4. ^ Howe, Desson. "'Consuming Passions'". The Washington Post. The Washington Post Company. Retrieved 2024-01-23.
  5. ^ Wilmington, Michael. "Movie Reviews : 'Consuming Passions' Embodies the Economic Ethic". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2024-01-23.
  6. ^ John Pym (ed.) Time Out Film Guide 2009, London: Aurum Press, 2008, p. 210

External links