The News-Times

‘The Menu’ filmmakers share ingredient­s of dining thriller

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A group of 11 diners gather one evening on a private island in the Pacific Northwest for a once-in-a-lifetime meal from a renowned chef in the new thriller “The Menu.”

At $1,200 a head, it promises to be a singular experience, but no one, not the movie star, the tech bros, the foodie fanboy, the food critic, the wealthy regulars, nor the wild card date, is ready for just how intense, and dangerous, things will get as the meal unfolds under the direction of Ralph Fiennes brilliant and tortured Chef Slowik.

The film comes from the minds of Will Tracy and Seth Reiss, both alums of The Onion and HBO’s “Succession.” The idea to satirize the cultish fine dining world came after an experience Tracy had at a fancy restaurant on a private island in Norway. They sent their script to director Mark Mylod, who directed the big excruciati­ng dinner party episode in season two of “Succession,” and they all hit the ground running to create one of the year’s most exciting and unexpected films — funny, twisted and even a little heartbreak­ing. It opens in theaters nationwide Friday.

To create a dynamic dining room experience, Mylod took a page from Robert Altman’s playbook in which all of the characters would be on set all the time, acting and conversing even when the script was technicall­y focused on someone else.

“I needed everybody to be in character all the time and improvisin­g way beyond what we’d written on the page,” Mylod said. “So I recruited this incredibly intelligen­t and smart and bold cast. No two takes were the same. It was all an exploratio­n.”

“If you put 12, 15, 20 actors in a room, that could be a recipe for disaster with egos and everything bouncing off and people wanting to do their best,” Hoult said. “But Mark set a great tone in the rehearsal period.”

“A direct ‘let’s skewer the rich’ is lowhanging fruit, I think,” he said. “I tend to approach things more from a character point of view rather than necessaril­y sociologic­ally as a whole. Those diners, most of them are appalling characters and deeply flawed characters, but it’s their flaws that I find really interestin­g because how did they get there? How do their egos de-nature their more vulnerable innocent self to get to that point? And what does it take to strip that away? That’s the journey that chef ’s work is trying to take them on that evening.”

 ?? Eric Zachanowic­h / AP ?? Ralph Fiennes, right, and Anya Taylor-Joy in a scene from the film “The Menu.”
Eric Zachanowic­h / AP Ralph Fiennes, right, and Anya Taylor-Joy in a scene from the film “The Menu.”

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