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Toast
An adaptation of celebrity chef Nigel Slater's bestselling memoir, 'Toast' is the ultimate nostalgic trip through everything edible in 1960's Britain. Nigel's mother was always a poor cook, but her chronic asthma and addiction to all things canned does not help.
Release : | 2011 |
Rating : | 6.5 |
Studio : | BBC Film, Ruby Films, Screen West Midlands, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Production Design, |
Cast : | Freddie Highmore Ken Stott Victoria Hamilton Oscar Kennedy Helena Bonham Carter |
Genre : | Drama Comedy History Family |
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Reviews
Excellent but underrated film
It is interesting even when nothing much happens, which is for most of its 3-hour running time. Read full review
The film may be flawed, but its message is not.
By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
I had never heard of this food "celebrity," though I am not immune to the charms of cooking and food.In order to enjoy a movie I have to feel some sympathy with the main character. They don't have to be the most likable person on the planet, but I have to have a connection to them somehow. Even if they are a strange evil genius, I can usually find my way in and relate.But this main character was hideous: A spoiled, whiny, bizarre little kid, who expected the world to revolve around him. There is an attempt to make a saint of his inept, sickly mother, but she was despicable as well. The child loathed the father, but despite seeing the father through the lens of that hatred, I felt the most sympathy for that character. Surely he had thoughts of infanticide but did not act on them. Now there's a saint.In no sense that this provide any insight into the human experience. I didn't care about anyone. I was glad when it was over.
The casting choices were very good in my opinion; very individual characters who you really feel as if you get to know. Freddie Highmore came in too late unfortunately. The sudden switch lost my sense of attachment to Nigel, and it was too near to the end to have it rebuild. I loved Oscar Kennedy. I thought he was amazing.The ending was such a letdown, I was still waiting for the 'real ending' when it happened. Nigel's sexuality wasn't really emphasized, nor was it not mentioned. It was just 'there'. It wasn't played into the plot line or Nigel's character development. Probably the most anticlimactic bit after the ending.Good. But could have been a lot better.
"The ultimate nostalgia trip through everything edible in 1960's Britain. ".ultimate....nostalgia....everything edible in the 60s???what a completely misleading statement. with a British production and cast that this could have been much better. A young boy dealing with being constantly bullied by his father, deals with the death of his mother, then more bullying, berating and violence by his father who brings on a new woman who also berates him, grows up, goes school where he is bullied, gets a job, deals with the death of his father, realizes he is gay, leaves home and the movie ends.this has NOTHING at all to do with 'everything edible in 1960s Britain' only the twice played 60s music, and a scene with hippies put it in that time frame, and the food was definitely NOT associated with the 60s because cuisine is timeless.
Here is how I imagine this hypothetical sequence of events. Screenwriter Lee Hall, best known for the Billy Elliot script, sat down and read Nigel Slater's autobiography. Hall loved it so much that he sat down and turned it into a screenplay named Toast. This is not unusual since the main characters in Billy Elliot and Toast are very similar. BBC One bought it instead of a film studio which should be clue number one that Toast was not going to be a potential Billy Elliot sequel. They hired a director, S.J. Clarkson, mostly known for directing TV episodes on both side of the pond such as EastEnders and Dexter. Most surprising and most perplexing, the BBC and the Toast script were able to attract acting talent, most notably Helena Bonham Carter.What did Carter see in this script? She took time out of her life the very same year both Alice in Wonderland and The King's Speech hit theaters to slap on ill-fitting kitchen attire and help bring the life and times of Nigel Slater to the world. Nigel Slater is a British food writer most notably for the Observer and previously for Marie Clair. He was born in the Midlands to repressed, but somewhat wealthy, parents who did not dedicate much time and effort into the domestic side of life.Nigel's mother played by Victoria Hamilton seems to have no experience in the kitchen whatsoever as she puts actual cans of food into boiling water and at the same time sucks on an inhaler to indicate to Nigel and the audience that something is not quite right. Nigel's father, Ken Stott, disappears to some sort of job during the day and returns home with few kind words for his son and prances on eggshells around his wife. When he tells Nigel to do something, the reason behind it is usually, "Do it for your mother" although Nigel cannot quite make sense of why eating a miserable ham would benefit his mother very much. Most conversations between Nigel and his father end in the exclamation, "You stupid, ignorant boy." Not surprisingly at all given the overt setup, Nigel's mom dies early in the film and then men are left to their own selves. This does not last very long before Helena Bonham Carter shows up as Mrs. Potter, the new house cleaner. Nigel sees straight away that the lady from local council housing has set her eyes on their nice house and well to do Mr. Slater. She goes above and beyond mere cleaning; she starts to darn socks and even cook. The allure and mysteries of cooking are a subplot so far as Nigel has never seen anyone make a proper meal before but is wise enough to recognize and agree with the axiom, "the way to a man's heart is through his stomach." Mrs. Potter knows this proverb all too well. Pies, turkeys, and potatoes all start to regularly appear on their dinner table, items which had never been there before. Nigel begins home economics training, at the expense of his popularity, to match wits with Mrs. Potter in the kitchen. His motivation for doing so is not clear. Is it jealousy for his father's affection? Does he despise Mrs. Potter so much that the one way he thinks he can get her fired is to be a better cook than she is? The Mrs. Potter character is one of the main reasons Toast is a truly horrible film. In Nigel's eyes, she is the epitome of evil; however, to every other rational human being and the audience, she is a normal woman who truly seems to take a shine to his father and even Nigel himself, although he is a true brat to her every chance he gets. She may latch on to the possibility of climbing the social ladder a bit too readily, but she is not mean. She shoulders all of the domestic responsibilities of the home and never once hits little Nigel and never even gets in a shouting match with him.Nigel's hostility wears on the audience very quickly and after a bit, just seems tired and out of place. Nigel is played by newcomer Oscar Kennedy as an eight year old and by Freddie Highmore (Charlie & the Chocolate Factory, Finding Neverland) as a teenager. His animosity never recedes and by the end, I was absolutely fed up with watching him. The interactions between Nigel and his father and between Nigel and Mrs. Potter do not work. I am incredulous that anyone, especially an actress of Helena Bonham Carter's caliber, would read this script and agree it would be a good idea to turn it into a film.Stay away from Toast at all costs. Even though it is based on an autobiography, it is ridiculous, monotonous, and worst of all, despising all of the characters on the screen is no way to enjoy a film.