
CinemaSerf
7
|
Jul 03, 2025
Now if you’re not up for a genuine dose of human kindness then this isn’t going to be a film for you. It’s all about the young “Babette” (Stéphane Audran) who has been taken in by a pair of spinster sisters who, despite plenty of opportunity, found themselves tied to their preacher father’s apron strings throughout his life, and who are now living life largely just waiting for it’s end. “Filippa” (Bodil Kjer) and “Martine” (Brigitte Federspiel) take after their father and are deeply religious in a community where the kirk is central to daily life, and so it seems the Christian thing to do to take in the struggling young girl who is fleeing from the slaughter of the Franco-Prussian war. Never thinking for a moment that she would ever be able to repay their kindness, she goes and wins the lottery and that’s when she decides that she will prepare a grand meal for her benefactresses and the village’s great and good. Now we are not talking pickled herring here, this is all going to be proper haute cuisine and so when the finest ingredients for the feast arrive, the village’s staid and gossiping population get all wound up. Such largesse, extravagance and indulgence - and from the culinary hands of a Roman Catholic! Might there be thunderstorms overhead their devoutly Protestant roofs? Of course, as the chatter increases and the day itself arrives, we find that there are quite a few cracks in this outwardly worthy little town and “Babette” might just end up exposing a few delicately hidden home truths from the townsfolk for us to savour as surely as we were enjoying a fine soufflé. The guest of honour is the acclaimed general “Lorens” (Jarl Kulle) who was previously in love with “Martine” before her father discouraged him, is now a regular at the Court in Copenhagen and as a former attaché for the king in Paris, he is able to offer a critique of a table that initially offends their more reserved tastes. The thing is, might her sumptuous dinner serve as something therapeutic and cathartic, or will pastries fly? This is a beautifully crafted film with three simple but enthralling performances leading a gentle analysis of religion, of the role of women and, most importantly of all, the role of food in creating an environment for people to thrive. There’s fun to be had amongst the superstitious churchgoers and the conclusion rather eloquently tops-off this engaging fairy tale of a film. This is a classy and stylish production that is really well worth and hour and an half and in case you didn’t know, it was written by the very Baroness Blixen that Meryl Street had brought to greater fame two years earlier.