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"The Seekers Guide To Great Movies"
by Life Coach, Mark Firehammer
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Babette's Feast (1987)
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Volume 12, Issue 12, 2004 |
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Devout sisters Anna and Martina reject the opportunity to leave their sparse
Danish village. Thirty-five years later, a French cook named Babette appears
at their door seeking respite from the French revolution's terrors. Fortune
smiles upon Babette when she wins the lottery. She prepares a feast to thank
the sisters for their kindness and to give them a taste of the world outside
their village.
Starring: Ghita Norby, Asta Esper Andersen, More
Director: Gabriel Axel
This months pick, Babette's Feast, comes with a few words to prepare you in
advance, in a way that the above film blurb does not! At first glance one
would think that this movie is one that falls into the category of luscious
food movies, of which there have been many great examples in the last few
years like Eat Drink Man Woman or Like Water for Chocolate. This movie is
not in that category! Yes there is a luscious feast, but that doesn't happen
until nearly the end of the movie. You won't see anything that resembles
ready to eat good food until about one hour and 12 minutes in, when someone
says, "dinner is served"! Everything that happens prior to that point in the
movie is superbly necessary in order to setup and deliver the powerful
message that this movie has to offer.
The blurb fails to mention that what the sisters Anna and Martina are
devoted to are; their father and his strict and, dare I say dogmatic,
Christian teachings! (Let me go on record in order to avoid angry e-mails!
This is not an attack on Christianity or any other spiritual belief system!
I believe all religions and all spiritual teachings contain the same
universal truths, it is the dogmatic adherence to variations of the
universal theme, that creates the conflict between and thus fear of
different spiritual perspectives!) That said, ….. Anna & Martina's father is
a widely known minister who teaches adherence to a strict interpretation of
Christian values and commandments, rejecting nearly all pleasures of the
flesh. The entire village lives by them. By viewing this movie you will
experience living in a simple, sparse and beautiful Danish seaside village
during the time of the French revolution from that perspective and
worldview. The rejection of simple pleasures is so complete that it might to
be, at times, uncomfortable to watch. Especially if the viewer possesses a
mindset that puts pleasure and enjoyment in a completely different light!
…Therein lay the first of the many lessons I found in this movie. Does their
rejection of so many of the simple pleasures that someone embraces, embraces
make them wrong? The answer is no, it only means that they have different
point of view. And that each from their point of view are absolutely right.
The grains of universal truths however distorted they might seem in their
application to living, are there for both points of view.
You will see that love is even rejected, by both sisters, in the face of
what they believed to be a more important and spiritual duty. If when
watching this film, this ascetic mindset begins to bother you at all, please
don't let it make you reach for the remote! I encourage you to keep
watching, because at 1 hour and 26 minutes and 45 seconds, you will receive
the gift that this movie has to offer! And that is, one of the most powerful
messages I've ever found in film. This entire message is delivered in under
two minutes by the soldier who appeared earlier in the film and is the love
possibility that is rejected by one of the sisters. When he returns 35 years
later for a celebration in memory of the deceased minister's birthday, he
finds an out of this world, unexpected and truly amazing culinary
experience! It is this meal that moves him to deliver two of the best
minutes to be found in film!
A quick synopsis! The young soldier misses out on love, and so departs, to
become a man of the world. 35 years later, he returns for a birthday
celebration in memory of the father of the lost love he never forgot. He had
risen to the rank of general, a man of privilege and therefore a man who
knows, understands and appreciates the pleasures of fine food and wine. With
his memory of the stark simplicity of the place, he is certainly not
expecting to share in anything resembling a grand banquet! Babette, whose
presence there is directly connected to the other sisters rejection of love,
many years earlier, has been living with the sisters for some months after
escaping from the terrors of the French revolution. Babette, an accomplished
chef, has been cooking for the sisters in return for being allowed to stay
with them. Her cooking is of course limited to the simple bland foods there
were customary in this village. And boy, is it bland! …When she wins the
French lottery, and asks them to allow her to prepare the upcoming birthday
feast as thanks for their kindness of taking her in. They reluctantly agree
but become fearful when they witness the arrival of lavish ingredients for
the meal, that are way beyond their experience and imaginations. So in a
fearful mindset, the sisters gather the villagers together, where they
agree, for the protection of their very souls, that during the meal they
will not speak of it, they not be conscious of the taste of it and they will
certainly not enjoy it! Their collective rejection, in contrast to the
worldly general's enjoyment of the meal, is priceless as it demonstrates a
great deal about the nature and source of truth, the power and significance
of choice and the role of perspective in all of that! I will say no more so
as not to spoil the bliss of the general’s words and of the last 13 minutes
of this film! Bon appetite!
Remember, you are what you watch!
Mark Firehammer, Life Coach

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