Los Angeles Times

A ‘Steak’ to sink your teeth into

- — Martin Tsai

The documentar­y “Steak (R)evolution” chronicles the quest for the best steak in the world, the hunt undertaken by Franck Ribière, a first-time director with cattle-breeder lineage, and Yves-Marie Le Bourdonnec, a top Parisian butcher profiled by the Wall Street Journal in 2012 and an associate producer here.

Reliably, they’ve lined up a veritable who’s who in the world of breeders, boucheries and restaurate­urs. For watchers of those Anthony Bourdain programs on the Travel Channel and CNN, the likes of Dario Cecchini of Tuscany, Italy, and David McMillan and Frédéric Morin of Montréal featured here should be no strangers.

You won’t find the typical Cooking Channel sizzling food porn, though. Ribière and Le Bourdonnec get almost hypertechn­ical with all the cattle breeds, feeds, grades, cuts, marbling, dry aging and preparatio­n.

The film has some revelation­s: Ribière concedes that the lean steak-frites from back home was hardly the best after sinking his teeth into the fatty hunk of half-filet mignon and half-sirloin at the storied Peter Luger Steak House in Brooklyn; and the steak cut from an entire wagyu ox that fetched 20,000 euros (about $23,000) in auctions was only ranked third in Ribière and Le Bourdonnec’s global survey.

“Steak (R)evolution.” No MPAA rating. Running time: 1 hour, 50 minutes. Playing: Landmark’s Nuart, West Los Angeles.

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