Often been surprised by a movie after what a film critic said about it? Ever felt cheated out of big bucks on the recommendations of a punk 24-year-old? Or really loved the ones they panned? Well, you no longer need to feel out of step with the current movie review band. Different Drummer is for you. Read more about our take on the film world. And get ready to relive your favorite movies with the recipes that follow each review. You can find many other great recipes in Different Drummer’s own Appetite for Murder: A Mystery Lover’s Cookbook.
Sully: The Sully Cocktail Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁
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An Affair to Remember: Pink Champagne Cocktail Recipe 🥁 🥁 🥁 🥁
/In what is arguably the most romantic film ever made, Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr exchange witty and self-effacing banter on the long way to love, their airy chitchat hiding two vulnerable hearts.
Read MoreDelicious: French Potato Truffle Tart Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁🥁
/This must see 2022 film will restore your faith in modern cinema. Everything in it is a work of art, from the delicious food, the scenery that resembles fine paintings, the piquant satire, brilliant script, and the outstanding acting.
Read MoreFather Brown: Strawberry Scone Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁
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My Life Is Murder: Alexa’s Rustic Rosemary Bread Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁1/2
/Xena like you’ve never seen her. Lucy Lawless brings that same fearless warrior spirit to fighting crime in modern day Melbourne as she did in sword and sandal Greece. And she still kicks ass, but this time using her mental prowess and wily spirit.
Read MoreThe Chosen: Loaves and Fishes Recipes 🥁🥁🥁🥁🥁
/Just change the point of view and “the greatest story ever told” becomes new and fresh again. This time it is the disciples, uneducated and often lost and confused, who frame this exquisite narrative about Jesus.
Read MoreA Walk in the Clouds: Pumpkin Flower Soup and Chocolate Flan and with Frosted Grapes 🥁 🥁 🥁 🥁
/Year Released: 1995
Directed by: Alfonso Arau
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Anthony Quinn, Aitana Sanchez, Giancario Giannini, Debra Messing
(PG-13, 102 minutes)
Genre: Romance
Do films have to be cynical and unhappy? Not hardly. Put away your cares and take “a walk in the clouds.”
Oh, and you’ll have to travel back more than 25 years – when the film was made in 1995 – another half century to the end of World War II, which is the setting. An era both more tragic and yet simpler, too.
Army sergeant Paul Sutton (Keanu Reeves) returns from the war to San Francisco and the wife he met and married the weekend before shipping out. More common than we might think, by the way.
The war has changed him; internal scars from that deadly conflict still haunt. Paul Sutton is not the same man now and wants to give up his job as a candy salesman for a new life.
All of which he has expressed in the daily letters he has written to his wife Betty (Debra Messing), who unfortunately has just stashed them away instead of reading them.
We all know this quick marriage is a mistake, but the decent Paul tries to do the right thing and takes a train to Sacramento to reapply for his old dead-end job.
Here is where we must inject Roger Ebert’s take on the film. He sees it as a sort of litmus test for the audience, giving it his highest rating:
“A Walk in the Clouds is a glorious romantic fantasy, aflame with passion and bittersweet longing. One needs perhaps to have a little of these qualities in one's soul to respond fully to the film, which to a jaundiced eye might look like overworked melodrama, but that to me sang with innocence and trust...At a time when movies seem obligated to be cynical, when it is easier to snicker than to sigh, what a relief this film is.” – Roger Ebert
This romantic soul (Different Drummer) has to agree with Ebert. The younger me rejected sentimental films as below par even if I secretly liked them. Now I have seen enough sadness in life that I embrace happy endings, innocence, and trust with open arms.
Yes, it is mostly melodrama that follows in our film – a chance meeting with a lovely girl on the train, Victoria Aragon (Aitana Sanchez), heir to a wealthy family that traces its roots to Mexico and Spain before that.
Her aristocratic and traditional family headed by a father who rules the roost and is sure “to kill his daughter if he finds out she is pregnant without a husband.”
The ever decent Paul volunteers to stand in for him in a temporary ill thought out scheme.
Anthony Quinn plays Victoria’s grandfather, the opposite of his son. He is filled with love and acceptance, the kind that orphan Paul has never known.
We have a lot of set pieces, some kind of hooky, like a grape stomping dance with barefoot women smashing grapes in a huge wooden tub. And somehow we forget the whole 3 week fermentation process, and the new wine is ready to taste almost immediately. Just as it was in Kirk Douglas’s Ulysses.
We also have a set of calamities that hit so hard and fast that it takes our breath away, but what anchors the film, which of course audiences loved and so many “critics” loathed, is the innocence and thorough decency of Victoria and Paul.
Each is willing to sacrifice their chance for happiness out of deference for others. Of course Paul must return to his wife, Victoria tells him, even we all know said wife is a superficial manipulator, not worth the lovely raven hair on Victoria’s head.
We laugh as they rush to cuddle together on the family’s bed when anyone enters their bedroom, Paul quickly returning to his quilt on the floor afterward.
I guess the same critics who complain about toxic masculinity are not too happy when it’s not there.
Enjoy this sweet film with Pumpkin Flower Soup or Chocolate Flan with Frosted Grapes, celebrating Victoria’s family and Paul past job selling chocolates, As well as many other creative and delicious treats.
–Kathy Borich
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Chef: The Cubano Pressed Sandwich Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁1/2
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Breaking Away: Melt in Your Mouth Meatball Recipe 🥁 🥁 🥁 🥁
/Indiana’s version of Dazed and Confused. But it is also very Greek, too, since it asks the question, “Who Am I?” Except we are not talking about kings and queens, but four Bloomington, Indiana, townies trying to find their way in life the year after high school.
Read MoreNotting Hill: Hugh Grant’s Apricot Cocktail Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁1/2
/Romantic comedies, or films in general, don’t get much better than this! Thoroughly delightful, this 1999 British film gets better with each viewing. Part of that is the charm of Hugh Grant at his zenith here, the loveliness of a radiant Julia Roberts, and a script that is witty and insightful.
That Touch of Mink: Bermuda Highball Recipe 🥁🥁🥁1/2
/Date Night: Seafood Risotto Recipe 🥁🥁🥁1/2
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A Million Miles Away: Marvelous Michoacán Souped Up Fruit Salad Recipe 🥁 🥁 🥁 🥁 🥁
/More please, Amazon. Movies that blast off fueled by the human spirit alone, discarding nihilism like booster rockets ejected into space. While shedding victimhood like the small planet it leaves behind.
Read MoreThe Bourne Ultimatum: Moroccan Herbed Fish Recipe 🥁🥁🥁1/2
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The Client: Antoine’s Creole Seafood Gumbo Recipe 🥁 🥁 🥁 🥁1/2
/The big names may get top billing (except here), but the kid is the core. Just as in Mark Twain and Steven Spielberg, he knows the truth even if he wraps it up in a package of lies to survive.
Read MoreThe Impossible: Siam Sunray Cocktail Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁
/This riveting look at the 2004 South Asian tsunami from the bird’s eye view of one family will have you glued to your seat. But this is not a cheap by-the-numbers disaster flick. The film’s strength comes from its focus on the human element rather than the details of the disaster.
Read MoreThe Highwaymen: Hoover Stew Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁🥁
/They finally get the story straight and the lawmen – not the thuggish criminals – are the real heroes.
Read MoreThe Kite Runner: Afghan Lamb Kabobs Recipe 🥁🥁🥁🥁
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The Sixth Sense: I See Dead People Cocktail Recipe 🥁 🥁 🥁 🥁 🥁
/Probably the only movie that is as good or better the second time around. The first time is creepy and surreal. The second time an intellectual exercise as well as a lesson in humility.
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