Boiling Point
"There is no room for mistakes."
A head chef balances multiple personal and professional crises at a popular restaurant in London.
"There is no room for mistakes."
A head chef balances multiple personal and professional crises at a popular restaurant in London.
Stephen Graham
Andy Jones
Vinette Robinson
Carly
Alice May Feetham
Beth
Jason Flemyng
Alastair Skye
Hannah Walters
Emily
Malachi Kirby
Tony
Izuka Hoyle
Camille
Taz Skylar
Billy
Lauryn Ajufo
Andrea
A head chef balances multiple personal and professional crises at a popular restaurant in London.
Probably one of the best films I've ever seen. What a unique cinematographic approach -- by physically bringing you closer to the characters, you become part of the restaurant in a visceral way. Getting stressed alongside the actors really reminded me of *Grapes of Wrath*. Highly recommended.
'Boiling Point' is fab. Stephen Graham is excellent throughout, he has shown his quality as an actor to me many times down the years in different productions and this is no different - great actor. Cool to see him reunite with Alice Feetham onscreen, those two are good in TV's 'Save Me'. The rest of the cast are strong, including Vinette Robinson and Jason Flemyng. You can tell the dialogue is largely improvised, it feels a little unnatural in one or two moments but for the vast majority it comes across as real. The fact it was shot in one take also makes it all the more riveting. The film does a very fine job at showing the heat of the kitchen, literally. There are a few predictable bits (tables 7, 13), but also some scenes (Jamie) that are the opposite. All in all, it's very well made and highly watchable. I'd recommend it, for sure.
(CASTELLANO) Me ha parecido muy buena, sobre todo por lo realista que resulta en cómo enseña una cocina profesional cuando todo empieza a ir mal al mismo tiempo. No hace falta haber trabajado en restauración para notar el estrés, la presión, los egos, los fallos, las jerarquías y esa sensación de que cualquier pequeño error puede contagiarlo todo. El plano secuencia no es un truco vacío. Aquí tiene todo el sentido del mundo, porque te mete dentro del restaurante y te obliga a vivir la noche sin escapatoria, casi como si fueras otro miembro del equipo. No hay respiro, no hay corte que alivie la tensión, y eso hace que la película se vuelva asfixiante de una forma muy eficaz. Stephen Graham está enorme. Sostiene la película con una mezcla de cansancio, rabia, ansiedad y vulnerabilidad que resulta muy creíble. Pero también se nota que esto funciona como trabajo coral: cocina, sala, clientes, jefes, problemas personales… todo suma para que el caos tenga vida propia. Lo mejor es que no parece una película “sobre chefs” en el sentido bonito o glamuroso. No va de platos preciosos ni de romanticismo culinario, sino del desgaste, de la presión constante y de cómo una noche complicada puede convertirse en una espiral infernal. Ahí es donde me parece más honesta y más potente. Además, la tensión está muy bien medida. Empieza fuerte, va acumulando problemas, roces y errores, y poco a poco te deja con esa sensación de que algo va a acabar rompiéndose. Y aunque hay cosas que pueden parecer algo marcadas de cara al clímax, el conjunto tiene tanta verdad que eso pesa menos. En conjunto, me parece una película muy buena, muy tensa y muy bien construida. El plano secuencia impresiona, sí, pero lo mejor no es el truco técnico: es cómo consigue que sientas que has pasado esa noche dentro de ese restaurante. (ENGLISH) I thought it was excellent, above all because of how realistic it feels in showing a professional kitchen when everything starts going wrong at once. You do not need to have worked in restaurants to feel the stress, the pressure, the egos, the mistakes, the hierarchy, and that sense that one small error can infect everything. The one-shot structure is not an empty gimmick. Here it makes complete sense, because it drops you inside the restaurant and forces you to live through the night with no escape, almost as if you were another member of the team. There is no relief, no cut to release the tension, and that makes the film suffocating in a very effective way. Stephen Graham is outstanding. He carries the film with a mix of exhaustion, anger, anxiety, and vulnerability that feels completely believable. But it also clearly works as an ensemble piece: kitchen, floor staff, customers, management, personal problems… everything adds to the feeling that the chaos has a life of its own. What I like most is that it never feels like a film “about chefs” in the glamorous sense. It is not about beautiful plates or culinary romance, but about exhaustion, constant pressure, and how one bad night can turn into a complete downward spiral. That is where it feels most honest and most powerful. The tension is also very well controlled. It starts strong, keeps piling on problems, friction, and mistakes, and gradually leaves you with the feeling that something is going to break. Even if a few things can feel slightly signposted toward the climax, the overall truth of it all matters more. Overall, I think it is a very strong, very tense, and very well-made film. The one-shot technique is impressive, yes, but the best thing is not the technical feat: it is the way the film makes you feel as if you spent that whole night inside that restaurant.
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