Plot Details: This opinion reveals minor details about the movie's plot.
Continuing in the grand tradition of the food movie genre, curiously (maybe) underemployed director Bob Giraldi (Hiding Out, The Routine), and not at all curiously overworked actor Danny Aiello come together to do nothing more nor less magic than spin one hell of a yarn. Working off a great script by virgin writing team Rick Shaugnessy and Brian S. Kalata, Dinner Rush squeezes its way into this niche genre to find itself approaching the head of the class with such movies as Big Night.
Dinner Rush puts a new spin on mobster movies, mainly by not being one... much. Louis Cropa (Aiello) owns a restaurant, is a bookie of sorts, and some mobsters are trying to muscle in on him. That may make a lot of people think hes a mobster himself, and frankly theyre probably right, but hes not convinced.
We enter the movie with Louis and his partner discussing getting out of the business. Some hoods from Queens want to move in, and Louis is of a mind to let them have the bookie business. Never the restaurant though. His partner has a different attitude, and we soon see him running afoul of said mobsters, who go by the names Black and Blue, and dress accordingly.
As much grief as this obviously causes Louis, he has other worries. His son Udo (Edoardo Ballerini - The Last Days of Disco, Drowning Lessons) is the restaurants chef, and has turned the place into something that is outrageously popular, thanks mostly to his Nouveau Italian creations. Its not all wine and roses though, Udo wants to really run things, and presses his father to give him the restaurant.
Louis has another problem in one of his cooks. Duncan (Kirk Acevedo - Oz, Band of Brothers) has a gambling problem, and is in debt to the very same mobsters causing all the trouble. Duncan, a sort of second son to Louis, is pushing Louis to the limits, but hes a right enough chap deep down.
Apart from our opening scene, the movie covers the span of only one night in the restaurant, and we dont really leave its confines except for the occasional cigarette break. Its a busy night, as always, and even though its a Tuesday, you cant get a table. Louis has invited Black and Blue to dinner so that they can discuss transfer of the bookie business, but the two upstarts want the restaurant as well. Hes also invited a police detective. A very snooty art gallery owner and his artist entourage take up a large table, leaving one of New Yorks most important food critics in an awful corner nook. Throw in a twenty-minute blackout, a trivia guru bartender, and the fact that both Duncan and Udo are after the same hostess, and frantic does not begin to describe the festivities. There is so much happening, its a wonder you can keep track of half of it, but its all given to us in such a way that were on top of it all.
You might think, since I am going to tell you what a wonderfully effective, tight script this movie has, that everything plays out in a solid line, with every aspect being relevant. Well, yes and no. The scenes and characters are all relevant, in some sense, but many are what you might call purposefully irrelevant. We are realistically immersed in a night at a restaurant, and while there is certainly a plotline, not everything that happens in a crowded restaurant can be important to it, and thats important.
Giraldis direction is truly striking, and thats a surprising thing to say about such a movie. When it suits the story, we feel as though weve pulled up a chair and leaned in toward our characters, but when necessary we are merely another aspect of the dizzying, frantic shuffle that keeps the restaurant going on an overcrowded night. Its a wonderfully paced movie, with definite, relevant, highs and lows, and clearly defined acts that have an actual purpose other than being the easiest way to deliver subtle shifts in character.
Apart from two glaring exceptions, the acting is excellent. Aiello is his usual, impressive self, and works wonderfully in this role that makes him something of storyteller. Ballerini, Acevedo, and John Corbett are also excellent in their roles, though Ballerini tries a little too hard at the beginning for Alec Baldwins character in Glengarry Glen Ross. Very strong supporting roles are also given by Vivian Wu (The Joy Luck Club, The Pillow Book), Summer Phoenix, and Polly Draper.
The two mentioned exceptions being Blue (Mike McGlone - The Brothers McMullen, Shes the One, The Bone Collector), and food-critic Jennifer Freeley (Sandra Bernhard). Youll remember McGlone as the really annoying guy who cant act in whatever you may have seen him in, and youll remember Bernhard as the really annoying woman who cant act in whatever youve seen her in. They are both horrible, as usual, and they are both extremely distracting in this otherwise wonderful little gem. McGlone is the very definition of an unbelievable gangster. Bernhard is presented, bizarrely, as the high profile food critic who eats like a cow, and seems not to have the first clue about anything to do with food.
Luckily, these two dont overly occupy the film, and they are easy to forgive.
Overall a very entertaining, enjoyable, passing the torch movie. Those who want to do things the old-fashioned way vs. those who change with the times, and one man who doesnt like any of the food in his own restaurant stuck in the middle.
Recommended: Yes
Viewing Format: DVD
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