This is a delightful and well observed film but as a previous reviewer has said it is aimed at a more mature audience and wont appeal if your usual fare is Hollywood block-busters.
I can see the beauty in this film, and I get why people call it a classic, but I really struggled to connect with it. For most of the runtime I was clock-watching, waiting for it to do something a bit less polite and a bit more alive.
The film takes its time getting to the feast — and because the feast is the plot's main event, you do feel the build-up stretching. I can't fault the performances, and the filmmaking is quietly immaculate, but the story telling felt a bit too contrived and too soft-focus for my taste.
Then the final stretch arrives and, suddenly, everything clicks. The meal isn't just dinner, it's the payoff: funny, sensual, and genuinely moving, and it finally gives the film some spark. I just wish it didn't take quite so long to reach the point where both the story and my enjoyment properly sit down at the table.
If you've enjoyed Transformers 1, 2, 3, and 4 and look forward to 5, 6, 7, and 8 this is not for you. If you prefer the way-off mainstream, cult film you have hit solid gold. This is a slow moving bleak story about repressed emotion, Lutherian purity, poverty, and thwarted passion in a rural remote Danish coastal village set during the French revolution. I enjoyed some of the scenes in a sober and settled sort of way. Most of it however is about love which will never be realised or allowed, be it love of cooking, or of a woman. This should have a 40 certificate, few under 40 will enjoy it, some over 50 will really like it.