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Babette's Feast
 
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Babette's Feast (1988)

Starring: Stéphane Audran, Bodil Kjer Director: Gabriel Axel Rating: G (General Audience) Format: DVD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (169 customer reviews)

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Product Details


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Some movies can only be described as delicious. In Babette's Feast, a woman flees the French civil war and lands in a small seacoast village in Denmark, where she comes to work for two spinsters, devout daughters of a puritan minister. After many years, Babette unexpectedly wins a lottery, and decides to create a real French dinner--which leads the sisters to fear for their souls. Joining them for the meal will be a Danish general who, as a young soldier, courted one of the sisters, but she turned him away because of her religion. The village elders all resolve not to enjoy the meal, but can their moral fiber resist the sensual pleasure of Babette's cooking? Babette's Feast deservedly won the 1987 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. This lovely movie is impeccably simple, yet its slender narrative contains a wealth of humor, melancholy, and hope. --Bret Fetzer


Product Description

Artistic, sensual and sacred passions unite in Babette's Feast. Written and directed by Gabriel Axel, from a short story by Out of Africa's Isak Dinesen, this Oscar(r)-winning*film offers "an irresistible mixture of dry wit and robust humanity" (Newsweek). Onthe desolate coast of Denmark live Martina and Philippa, the beautiful daughters of a devout clergyman who preaches salvation through self-denial. Both girls sacrifice youthful passion to faith and duty, and even many years after their father's death, they keep his austere teachings alive among thetownspeople. But with the arrival of Babette, a mysterious refugee from France's civil war, life for the sisters and their tiny hamlet begins to change. Soon, Babette has convinced them to try something truly outrageousa gourmet French meal! Her feast, of course, scandalizes the local elders. Just who is this strangely talented Babette, who has terrified this pious town with the prospect of losing their souls for enjoying too much earthly pleasure? *1987: Foreign Language Film

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169 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (169 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
251 of 255 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 5-Star Meal, 5-Star Cinema, November 17, 2001
By Jane Guerrero (San Jose, CA USA) - See all my reviews
The feast of the title doesn't take place until well into the film. In fact, the majority of the film is spent telling the story of 2 godly sisters and the choices they made in life. Both sisters passed up true love and the promise of success in order to remain faithful to their religious beliefs. Instead they pass their lives assisting their minister father and carry on his work after his death. They continue their quiet lives past mid-life until one of the sisters' former suitors sends them a Parisian refugee, Babette. Babette spends 14 years with the sisters as cook, her only link to her former life being a lottery ticket that a friend in Paris renews for her every year. One day she wins the lottery and decides to use the money to prepare a sumptous dinner for the sisters and their small congregation. More than just an epicurean delight the feast is an outpouring of Babette's gratitude.

If the plot sounds thin, be assured it's anything but. The story is as rich and satisfying as the feast Babette prepares. We see the delicate romances that develop for each sister and understand their reasons for turning their suitors away. We see the lives the sisters, and their men, have led after making their decision. The feast comes at a time when the sisters are asking themselves questions that they never voice: Did they make the right decision all those years ago? Was it worth it? Reassurance comes in an unexpected and exquisitely romanitc way.

This film is such a wonderful example of what happens when filmmakers are interested in telling a good story and telling it well. It doesn't follow a 'formula' or cater to a demographic and is a perfect example of why independent and foreign films are so much more satisfying than Hollywood movies.

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177 of 187 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars But this really *is* Caille en Sarcophage!, July 3, 2002
For years I had heard that this was a good movie, but I resisted seeing it. How could a Danish movie about a dinner be all that compelling? I finally broke down and rented it - and watched it, stunned. This is truly a great film.

The story is simple. Two pious Danish sisters hire a French maid, Babette, out of a sense of charity. Fourteen years later, Babette wins the lottery. Out of her winnings, she proposes to serve the sisters and their fellow religionists a meal.

The film is simple. And like all things that are truly simple, it is a very, very rich feast.

The film can be enjoyed on many levels, but it is an overtly Christian film; and the feast is the Lord's Supper. Babette's gift to the sisters and their community is the gift of grace. Unasked for, unearned, and of inestimable value.

The sisters were daughters of a stern Protestant who had formed a devout community. When the sisters were young and beautiful, they were each tempted by the chance to have great love and success outside their community. But they remained loyal to their father and their faith. After their father died, they carried on with their faith community. But as the years passed by, bickering and dissension set in.

One rainy day, there is a knock on the door and Babette appears in their doorway. She has a letter of introduction from one of the sister's old love, and they decide to take her in. Babette quietly makes herself indispensable to the sisters and the entire village. One day, she wins the lottery, and the sisters assume that she will now leave them. Before leaving them, however, she insists on serving them a proper French meal.

The meal itself is the center of the film, and during that meal all the threads of the film are richly woven together. The pious sisters and their community finally learn the true depths of faith - something which is more than just what we believe, but rather also reflects what we do and the love with which we do it. They are twelve to supper, and that number is no accident. Nor is the grace that flows through that meal. Any Christian can appreciate its significance. And anyone who loves the Eucharist can only smile in joy, when one of the guests identifies the main dish as "Caille en Sarcophage" (Quail in a sarcophagus.) He retails a story of the time he ate this extraordinary meal in a fine Parisian restaurant. The other guests smile, but miss his drift. And he exclaims, "But this really *is* Caille en Sarcophage!" They still do not understand, but the meal works its magic nonetheless.

This is a film of the sacramental vision - God's rich love reaching out to us body and soul.

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61 of 61 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars AN EXQUISITE MOVIE THAT GREATLY BENEFITS FROM DVD!, February 1, 2001
I don't think I can add any more information about the wonderful story itself in light of all the superlative reviews found here. If you've seen it, you know it's a classic that is definitely worth owning, to be viewed and enjoyed repeatedly. If you've never seen Babette's Feast, you owe it to yourself to see it and find out what people mean when they say they experience a film. Yes, it's that good and that powerful. And the best part of it all: no guns, no explosions, no sex, no vulgarity.

The DVD is, without a doubt, THE format for this movie. The print has been considerably cleaned up and brightened. What a difference with my "old" fuzzy VHS copy! The widescreen format benefits this film tremendously. The sound is crisp and even, with no sudden drops or surges in volume. The DVD offers three language tracks: the original Danish/French, English, and Spanish. I personally recommend that you keep the Danish/French track with English subtitles. It's the only real way to convey the full meaning and emotions of the story. Avoid the English track at all costs: it's unbelievably bland and emotionless (thereby removing any and all subtleties and charm from this superb story) and it's muffled. I did not check out the Spanish track.

Worth much more than "just" 5 stars!

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars a disappointment
Having heard for several years how wonderful this movie was I fully expected to love it. A small women's group with which I am associated invited me to view it with them last... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Teatime2

5.0 out of 5 stars Award winning film
The DVD of this Oscar winning film (foreign film) is spectacularly grand! The several stories within this Scandanavian film all seem to come together thanks to the culinary... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Greeta K. Brown

5.0 out of 5 stars Babette's Feast
This is a great movie. I taped it on VHS years ago. I wanted the DVD.
Published 1 month ago by Carol Schlotterbeck

2.0 out of 5 stars WEIRRRRRD
My husband and I just couldn't see how food was a spiritual experience. We're religious, too. It looked like a movie to love, but it made no real sense. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Jane Austen's

5.0 out of 5 stars Sumptuous. Spellbinding. Unforgetable.
This is one of those foreign films that manages to make you forget completely that you are following the dialogue via subtitles. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Read Rover

5.0 out of 5 stars Feast for the viewers as well,
Babette's Feast is is a singular film. It manages to tell its story very well. There are no surprises, no twists and turns, yet it is totally unpredicable. Read more
Published 3 months ago by J. R. Schuh

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent film
This film is excellent, and this edition has lots of options for subtitles and dubbed languages.
Published 5 months ago by C. K. Morrison

5.0 out of 5 stars babbettes feast
again its like magic how i ask for a title
and wham you got it
thank you sooooo very much
Published 5 months ago by linda linda

5.0 out of 5 stars bABETT'S fEAST
Just want to know why i have to pay $15.00 for parcell and on the parcel is only $4.50 worth of stamps?
Published 5 months ago by Dirk Van Schalkwyk

5.0 out of 5 stars Babette's Feast
Out of print since the current state of Japan board, could not be seen.
Able to get more done. The beauty of the scene from the first
I expect truth to the end.
Published 5 months ago by K. Kurokawa

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