The God of Cookery

December. 21,1996      
Rating:
7.2
Trailer Synopsis Cast

The most renowned and feared chef in the world loses his title of God of Cookery because of his pompous attitude. Humbled, he sets out to reclaim his title.

Stephen Chow as  Stephen Chow
Karen Mok Man-Wai as  Twin Dagger Turkey
Nancy Sit Ka-Yin as  Nancy Sit / Princess of Taste
Ng Man-tat as  Benbry's Uncle
Tats Lau Yee-Tat as  Wet Dreams
Vincent Kok as  Bull Tong
Lee Siu-Kei as  Goosehead
Law Kar-Ying as  MC at Cooking Competition
Stephen Au Kam-Tong as  MC for Stephen
Liz Kong Hei-Man as  Reporter

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Reviews

Karry
1996/12/21

Best movie of this year hands down!

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Huievest
1996/12/22

Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.

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TrueHello
1996/12/23

Fun premise, good actors, bad writing. This film seemed to have potential at the beginning but it quickly devolves into a trite action film. Ultimately it's very boring.

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Bea Swanson
1996/12/24

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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sharky_55
1996/12/25

Anyone who has seen those reality cooking shows in the vein of Iron Chef will be familiar with their dramatic camera compositions and movements, their exaggerated sound effects and the over-excited running commentary that provides an intensity like a sporting match. In Stephen Chow's The God of Cookery, it takes this spoof to the utter heights of absurdism and then some. In a mock competition under the heavens for the title of God of Cookery itself, Chow dresses as a divine judge who crushes each entrant with the most ridiculous criticisms ever. There is one chef who has even carved a delicate figurine of Buddha out of tofu, but it's declared too cold to eat. And for the crafty final entrant whom has planned ahead for the dismissive God's comments, he finds himself attacked for his ugly looks. This and the moment where the nose-picking cross dresser presents him with flowers are comedic tropes that Chow does not shy away from, and although they may be somewhat low-brow, you can't help but laugh. Chow has captured the tone of these reality shows very well. His cutting is thick and furious and dramatic, made even funnier by the shocked and gasping reactions from each of the characters involved. The sound effects heighten each blow to their melodramatic high - the whooshes and dings like they are competing in a high stakes game show. When Chow insultingly asks the undercover Bull Tong to prove his loyalty, the scene is shot like with an absurd flourish as he drops his pants, spins around and prepares his roll of toilet paper (which he just so happens to have on hand). The slow-motion and overexposed lighting give each of these scenes a soft, warm glow like a photographer shooting a plate of food for a magazine - only Chow does it with every single ridiculous occasion. And when Bull exposes him for the fraud he is, and demonstrates true cooking ability, it is like he is playing a game of Fruit Ninja...only this was years beforehand, with the exaggerated ingredients flying in motion and the rapid swishes of the knife. Chow knows how to milk every last scene for all its comedic potential. When he first unveils the new combined super food Pissing Beef Balls, the others are hesitant of its potency, until they try it out for themselves, and the waterfall of juice that erupts like a volcano is shot from a flurry of different angles and the eater gets consumed by a prancing daydream. This precedent is then extended as each new customer tries them out to hilarious effect. These are people who take their food seriously - no doubt evident by the gang warfare trope that is seamlessly and super seriously applied here (and there is even a The Usual Suspects reference in the mock-up line). The villains will do anything to stop Chow - even arrange his restaurant branch locations to spell die - something that is then reversed upon them. They've even bribed the judge of the final tournament - played hilariously by Nancy Sit as she gives running commentary to the food fight ("Good folding chair") and then has an orgasmic reaction to a simple char siu and rice. And as Chow nearly always does - there is a kung fu element to the way he glides on top of water and into the building for a late dramatic entrance. Nothing is off limits in God of Cookery - it reminds me of another food comedy, Tampopo, where the culinary arts was treated just as seriously. The main romantic storyline here is perhaps a bit cheesy, lacking the depth of say, Kung Fu Hustle, and the subtitles are iffy at times...but you will never once doubt your laughter.

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bcheng93
1996/12/26

i guess i am a pretty big fan of stephen chow. i think i have seen every one of his movies and before he became a big movie star he was on a couple of TVB television series and i have watched those also. the man is a outright comic genius, in fact one of the best in the world.personally for me, all his movies are watchable and they are never too long( 11/2 hours usually ). this particular movie is a little better than his usual efforts...but like i said, they are all funny.the usual suspects are all here in this movie beside's stephen chow. if you've watched enough hk cinema you'll know what i'm talking about. also in here for a couple of quick cameos is johnny to regular lam suet, he was ridiculously funny. there is also famous television personalities and also the beautiful karen mok in one of her first movies.i've noticed this and that is in everyone of his movies that came out he always has the "hot' or "it" girl at the moment. in this movie it is karen mok. one of the things i liked about the movie besides the endless jokes and gags is that it deals with Chinese cooking and i loved how they showed this in the movie. some of it is real(like using overnight rice to make fry rice)and most of it is not, but a lot is steeped in Chinese cooking legend. the beef balls are actually made that way with the two batons, and the garbage noodles are available in just about every food-stall to this day.the 18 bronze-men of shaolin gag was used twice and both times sidesplitting funny. the ping-pong scene with the beef balls gag is so famous everybody knows of it in hk and china.if you're looking to laugh yourself silly i recommend that you try out this movie. cooking, kung-fu and stephen chow...man, you can't beat that combination.

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Charles Herold (cherold)
1996/12/27

I loved Shaolin Soccer, and keep hoping to find another Chow film I'll like as well. Some I have liked, some I have not, but nothing beats that one.God of Cookery didn't impress me at all, but it's hard to judge the film fairly, because the English subtitles were inept. I often had no idea what was going on; I think the subtitles must have been made with google translate or something. This makes it hard to offer a definitive view of the movie. I can definitely say it is not as good as Shaolin Soccer, because that movie had stunning, over-the-top visual moments, and this movie - at least the first half, which is all I could take - had little that compared. But with better subtitles, who knows?

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dessall
1996/12/28

Shi Shen is definitely one of the best movies of Zhou. It is full of funny stuff, and it have many astounding moments with specific film technology, those are seldom seen in Hongkong movies. It also represents the culture of Chinese cuisine. In this film, Zhou combined cooking with kung fu, which resulted its great visual effects.I like this movie!!!

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