The Taste of Others Movie Review
The Taste of Others Review

"The Taste of Others" Overview

Rating: NR
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Agnès JaouiProducer : Christian Bérard,Charles Gassot
Screenwiter : Agnès Jaoui,Jean-Pierre Bacri
Starring : Anne Alvaro,Jean-Pierre Bacri,Brigitte Catillon,Alain Chabat,Gerard Lanvin,Christiane Millet,Wladimir Yordanoff,Agnès Jaoui
In The Taste of Others, a wealthy suburban businessman named Castella gets
infatuated with a theatrical actress and becomes a frequent visitor of her
bohemian circle of friends. The premise might not be very original but the
delicious twist of the story is that it is not so much about Castella's pursuit
as it is about how different social strata are formed and how they intersect
with one another.
Castella (Jean-Pierre Bacri) and his wife have to attend a local stage
production of Bérénice, in which their daughter plays a small part. They don't
care for the theatre and can't understand the verse, but, to Castella's own
surprise, he finds himself unusually moved by a leading actress Clara. The
charming point here is that Clara isn't a young aspiring theatrical diva but an
aging, harried, and often unemployed actress from a small provincial theatre.
Castella, however, doesn't see her that way: For him, she brings into his
dispassionate routine the whiff of a free-spirited life including cozy, drunken
late-night talks and vibrant gallery gatherings. Through happenstance,
Castella's new business arrangement requires him to learn English, and Clara
(Anne Alvaro) becomes his teacher.
Despite the fact that Clara's friends are contemptuous of Castella for his
ignorance, plebian tastes, and crass jokes, the businessman shows up at every
reception or theatrical premiere. His is not a vicious fellow, not by any
stretch, and his homophobic remarks are devoid of malice -- he is simply too
unimaginative to go beyond his usual milieu -- and as long as he is dancing on
his toes, Clara is ferociously dismissive of his courtship. The film elegantly
hints, however, at the fact that even a small reversal of fortune can bring up
a philistine in the most uncompromising of artists.
The film doesn't shock the viewer in any way, but it is full of delightful,
witty, and keen observations on human behavior, the social fiber of people's
close circles, and those quiet, under-the-breath moments that capture the
essence of people's tastes and choices. It also makes a curious observation of
the mechanism that brings two people together and how impossible it is to
explain the complexity of attraction between seemingly incongruent people.
Castella's wife, for example, with the ironic name Angelique (Christiane
Millet), is an easily recognizable type of a rich bored housewife. An interior
designer by profession, Angelique decorates her house to make it look like a
flower shop, and she herself is always decked out in unbearably motley
dresses. She is the film's emotional freak, oblivious to anything but her
rabid little dog and a philosophy of the moral superiority of animals over
humans.
The cast's regular bartender Manie (Agnes Jaoui, who also directed the film) is
sleeping with both Castella's bodyguard Moreno (Gerard Lanvin) and the
chauffeur Deschamps (Alain Chabat). She is accepted among the artists, for she
is uncompromisingly independent and fearless, while Castella gets laughed at in
his face. An interesting development takes place when Manie and Moreno
discover that they perhaps stumble into a serious relationship: Moreno's
morality doesn't allow him to accept Manie's selling drugs to supplement her
income but does allow for his own brainless, painfully boring job.
Agnes Jaoui's directorial debut is shot in a plain, well-paced style: Nothing
is rushed or crumpled and, besides following the story, there are always
snippets of other people's life as background, helping you remember the larger
tapestry of life. Also, the filmmaker uses the charming device of starting a
scene in one place and, nonchalantly, ending it in another, giving the story a
sense of both completeness and fragmentation at the same time.
The Taste of Others doesn't reach into the deeply-rooted causes of why people
end up having one circle of friends and not another. It does show, however,
that we tend to be reluctant to accept others into our established boundaries.
This 112-minute long film has a light yet precious tinge of the great British
writer William Somerset Maugham's wit and irony, but without his incisive and
cynical attitude toward life.
Aka Le goût des autres.
Taste's good.
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Review by Julia Levin
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