Chef

In his latest film, Chef, Jon Favreau taps into the zeitgeist of America’s current food culture—a world where chefs and bloggers are rock stars and Twitter can make or break careers. But underneath all the razzmatazz of carefully crafted food scenes lies a sweet story about a man trying to straighten his life’s bearings while reconnecting with his young son.
A detailed and entertaining romp through kitchen life, Chef proves once again that Favreau’s a major triple-threat in Hollywood: He wrote, directed and even stars in the film, despite his non-cookie cutter, leading-man appearance (of which his character is reminded several times throughout the film).
Chef Carl Casper (Favreau) is at a personal and professional crossroads after 10 years helming the same kitchen at a tony Los Angeles restaurant. No longer a young hotshot chef, Carl finds himself in a rut and attempts to get creative with the menu, much to the displeasure of the restaurant’s controlling owner, Riva (Dustin Hoffman). After he receives a scathing review from a top blogger/food critic, Ramsey Michel (Oliver Platt), for cooking the regular menu, as ordered by the restaurant’s owner, Casper’s life spins further out of control.
He hears talk about his food on social media, so with the help of his doting 10-year-old son Percy (a terrific performance by up-and-comer Emjay Anthony), Chef Carl opens a Twitter account. The bad review has gone viral—and in thinking that Twitter @reply is a private message, the newbie inadvertently starts a flame war with the blogger. It escalates over the Internet, so Casper publicly invites the critic back for the meal he wanted to cook in the first place. Riva quashes the idea and orders the chef to cook the “greatest hits.” Casper quits—but he doth not go gently into that good night. He has a public meltdown, decrying food critics and their work, while at the same time hilariously demonstrating to Ramsey what exactly makes a chocolate lava cake “molten.” His momentary lunacy, of course, is immediately posted to the web.
With the encouragement of his ex-wife, Inez (an understated performance by Sofia Vergara, which is a good thing), Casper joins her and Percy in Miami, where his culinary career first began. Ostensibly, he’s there to take care of/bond with Percy while she’s taking business meetings, but Inez has also arranged for Casper to meet with her ex-husband (Robert Downey Jr.) ,who has an old roach coach for sale. Though he’s only in the film for about five minutes, Downey—who worked with Favreau on Ironman—brings the charm, smarm and a lot of laughs to this scene.