Eat Drink Man Woman (Yin Shi Nan Nu)
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Director Ang Lee took the world (and award ceremonies everywhere) by storm in 2000 with his ground-breaking film, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. But his 1994 film, Eat Drink Man Woman, proves that Lee’s spectacular directing in Crouching Tiger wasn’t just a fluke.

Eat Drink Man Woman (Yin Shi Nan Nu) follows the lives of a family in Taipei—a widowed chef, Chu (Sihung Lung), and his three daughters. Chu is nearing retirement and is frustrated by his weakening sense of taste and his daughters’ growing independence. His oldest daughter is a chemistry teacher who’s never gotten over a decade-old broken heart. She’s given up on love and given her heart to religion—and she’s accepted the fact that she’ll be the one to stay and take care of her aging father. Chu’s middle daughter is an airline executive who’s fiercely independent when it comes to both her family and her relationships with men. She fights her father’s traditionalism, yet she feels tied to it—she wants to move out and get her own place and live her own life, but she feels obligated to her family at the same time. And Chu’s youngest daughter is a student (who also works at Wendy’s) who’s still naïve when it comes to love.

Each Sunday, Chu slaves in the kitchen, lovingly preparing a feast for his three daughters, who eat first in awkward silence but begin to open up to each other as the film progresses.

Eat Drink is an inexplicably beautiful film about family, food, and love. In it, the four main characters learn to love—and learn to follow their hearts—while they learn to appreciate one another. It’s not a fast-paced, action-filled movie, but the characters are captivating enough to hold your attention—and it’s seasoned with just the right amount of laughter and tears.

Just a few words of warning, however: there are several cooking scenes, in which Chu creates his mouth-watering Chinese dishes. First, be warned that they’re sure to give you the urge to pause the movie and call the Chinese takeout place down the street. So you might want to be prepared and order some fried rice and egg rolls before you push play. And second, vegetarian viewers might want to close their eyes during some of the cooking scenes. In fact, even if you’re not a vegetarian, you may want to close your eyes—or you may feel compelled to become a vegetarian after seeing the things that Chu does to chicken carcasses.

If you loved Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, though, you’ll fall in love with Eat Drink Man Woman, too. I recommend that you run right out to the video store, pick up some Chinese takeout on your way home, and enjoy this tasty film with someone you love.

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