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At The Movies: Grande Maison Paris' star is the food, Happy Gilmore 2 back with sophomoric humour
At The Movies: Grande Maison Paris' star is the food, Happy Gilmore 2 back with sophomoric humour

Straits Times

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Straits Times

At The Movies: Grande Maison Paris' star is the food, Happy Gilmore 2 back with sophomoric humour

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Grande Maison Paris (PG13) 111 minutes, opens on Aug 7 exclusively at The Projector ★★★☆☆ The story: Top chef Natsuki Obana (Takuya Kimura) opens a fine dining establishment in France, following the events of the TBS Television hit series La Grande Maison Tokyo (2019) and the special episode La Grande Maison Tokyo Special (2024). He is chasing a third Michelin star, in the world capital of haute cuisine, no less. Grande Maison Paris serves reheated kitchen drama tropes, all the usual pressure, camaraderie and setbacks in the pursuit of gastronomic perfection under hard-driving artisan Obana. Is there ever any other kind of movie chef? Director Ayuko Tsukahara's feature sequel to her Japanese television series filmed on location in Paris also returns loyal sous chef Rinko (Kyoka Suzuki). Erstwhile garcon Rikutaro (Ikki Sawamura) is now the hall manager. And K-pop rapper Ok Taec-yeon of boy band 2PM joins the staff as a passionate patissier, whose violent entanglements with loan sharks add to their woes. A banquet for the beau monde is a bust, and Obana will lose his restaurant unless he gets his stars by first overcoming his ego and outsider status. 'Do you think a Frenchman would be able to get the best ingredients if he opens a sushi restaurant in Tokyo?' asks a local wholesaler. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore East-West Line MRT service resumes after delays lasting around 5 hours; track point fault fixed Singapore Hidden vapes and where to find them: Inside ICA's clampdown at land checkpoints Singapore Sorting recyclables by material could boost low domestic recycling rate: Observers Singapore SM Lee receives Australia's highest civilian honour for advancing bilateral ties Asia Trump's sharp India criticism corners Modi as rift deepens Singapore More train rides taken in first half-year, but overall public transport use stays below 2019 levels Singapore BlueSG needs time to develop software, refresh fleet, say ex-insiders after winding-down news Asia Cambodia-Thailand border clash a setback for Asean: Vivian Balakrishnan Obana's rejoinder is to celebrate the city's multiculturalism. Hence, he brings together his dedicated transnational team to reinvigorate Gastronomie Francaise with their Japanese and Korean culinary traditions. Expect their creations to be an instant triumph in a glossy, feel-good melodrama that may be enjoyed by those without a Disney+ subscription to The Bear (2022 to present) and do not question why French epicures have never before had fusion cuisine. Hot take: The luscious food on show, supervised by three-Michelin-starred Kei Kobayashi of restaurant Kei in Paris, is better than the show itself. Happy Gilmore 2 (PG13) 118 minutes, streaming on Netflix ★★★☆☆ Adam Sandler (left) and Bad Bunny in Happy Gilmore 2. PHOTO: NETFLIX The story: Adam Sandler swings at a belated sequel to his hole-in-one comedy about an ill-tempered hockey bro-turned-golf legend. The 1996 American farce Happy Gilmore was a happy occasion for both the star and his title character. It made Sandler one of Hollywood's most bankable comedians, while Happy ended up contentedly retired with his wife Virginia (Julie Bowen) and their five kids after winning six PGA Tour Championships. But then, Happy accidentally drives a shot at Virginia's head, killing her. Eleven years later in Happy Gilmore 2, by Sandler's Murder Mystery (2019) director Kyle Newacheck, he is a broke, devastated drunk stocking supermarket shelves until he loses that job too. A comeback is his only option to raise money for his daughter's (Sunny Sandler) ballet school fees. It will be his redemption, competing in a PGA tournament against the breakaway golf league of an odious energy-drink huckster (Benny Safdie), whose halitosis is a running gag. The humour is still proudly lowbrow. But it is good-natured, with the older, shaggy Happy such a sad underdog, former nemesis Shooter McGavin (Christopher McDonald) escapes from a mental hospital to become his ally. Latino music supernova Bad Bunny, playing Happy's clueless new caddy, is particularly endearing among the callbacks and cameos, who include The Substance (2024) star Margaret Qualley, American pop sensation Taylor Swift's football star boyfriend Travis Kelce and Sandler's buddies like American actor Steve Buscemi. Why them and why so many? Just because. Plus, there is a full roster of pro golfers appearing as themselves, from John Daly and Jack Nicklaus to Nick Fowler and Rory McIlroy . The love of the game is genuine as the community unites to save tradition from the upstarts. Hot take: The humour is sophomoric though jovial. No shame at catching yourself chortling.

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