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Babette's Feast
Overlook Pick

Babette's Feast

Artistic, sensual and sacred passions unite in Babette's Feast.
72
User Score443 ratings
TMDB 7.216+19871h 44mDA
DramaHistoryComedy

Synopsis

A French housekeeper with a mysterious past brings quiet revolution in the form of one exquisite meal to a circle of starkly pious villagers in late 19th century Denmark.

Director
Gabriel AxelFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Rungstedlundfonden4 production companies
Release
August 11, 1987Released
Box Office
$4M

Top Cast

8 of 30
Stéphane Audran
Stéphane Audran
Babette
Bodil Kjer
Bodil Kjer
Filippa
Birgitte Federspiel
Birgitte Federspiel
Martine
Jarl Kulle
Jarl Kulle
General Lorens Löwenhielm
Jean-Philippe Lafont
Jean-Philippe Lafont
Achille Papin
Bibi Andersson
Bibi Andersson
Svensk hofdame
Ghita Nørby
Ghita Nørby
Fortæller (stemme)
Asta Esper Hagen Andersen
Asta Esper Hagen Andersen
Anna

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CRCulver
Sep 12, 2018

Based on a Karen Blixen story, <i>Babette's Feast</i> is a heartwarming tale of generosity in 19th century Denmark. As the film opens, we are introduced to Martine and Philippa, daughters of a charismatic preacher in a tiny Jutland village. Dedicated to their father's work, they turn down the courtship of a Danish officer and a French musician. Decades later, the musician sends them Babette, a refugee from the destruction of the Paris Commune, in the hope that the sisters can shelter her and employ her as a maid. When she wins an annual lottery, Babette decides to put on a feast for her employers, but no one expects the depths of selflessness she goes to. <i>Babette's Feast</i> is entertaining enough, and it gives an idea of just how dull and messy life in Jutland was at this time. The details of the feast will make you salivate and dust off the French cookbook, and certainly the ending will make you say "Aww" in spite of how clumsily it's put on film. Otherwise the acting isn't too revelatory, and the humour is pretty basic (the same joke is even used twice). One professional reviewer said this doesn't aim much higher than a television movie, and I'd have to agree.

r96sk
Feb 15, 2024

Well, <em>'Babette’s Feast'</em> is exactly what it says on the tin, that's for sure. It is a film that I'd personally refer to as 'good', though my interest did ascend and descend interchangeably throughout. The religiously and sing-y scenes were the parts that kinda lost me if I'm honest, but there is still enough there that I had a fine time seeing unfold - the characters for one, and then the final feast itself is decent viewing. Stéphane Audran is the best performer onscreen, I enjoyed her showing. The actresses that play Filippa and Martine, both younger and older, are solid. Beyond them, the rest of the cast all kinda merge into one in my memory as being alright. It's very much all about Audran, I'd say. I do like how the film unfolds and what it has to end up saying, there is charm in there. I just personally would've had it move along at a slightly quicker pace because this does drag a tiny bit in parts; and that's despite it only being practically a 90 minute movie. Overall, though, it's a pass from me.

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