Eat Drink Man Woman
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Ang Lee
Sihung Lung
Yu-wen Wang
Chien-lien Wu
Yang Kuei-mei
Shih-jay Lin
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A renowned Taipei chef and widower clings to old recipes for food and wisdom while his three grown daughters attempt to create lives of their own.
Director
Ang Lee
Cast
Sihung Lung
Yu-wen Wang
Chien-lien Wu
Yang Kuei-mei
Shih-jay Lin
Huei-yi Lin
Jui Wang
Chi-der Hong
Chuen Wang
Armando Sanchez
Yu Chen
Anthony Wong
Cheng-fen Tso
Hwa Wu
Chung Ting
Lester Chan
Yu-chien Tang
Louis F Buozo
Sylvia Chang
Man-sheng Tu
Kuei Ya-lei
Chao-jung Chen
Dina Emerson
Tomas Ulrich
Winston Chao
Ramon Aracena
Hector Martignon
Gin-ming Hsu
Cho-gin Nei
Crew
Alex Albanese
Alex Albanese
Ryo Aska
Greg Ayves
Chris Babida
Anthony Bregman
Gaylord Chan
Steve Chang
Bob Chen
Chih-hao Chen
Ching-wei Chen
Chiu-hao Chen
Hsiao-tung Chen
Huo-lien Chen
Johnny Chen
Tai-yu Chen
Wen-chi Chen
Yung-chih Chen
Elizabeth Cheng
Su-ming Cheng
Susan Cheng
Tsai-tung Cheng
Patrick Derivaz
Steve Elson
Joe Gonzalez
Steve Hamilton
George Frederick Handel
Bradford L Hohle
Ted Hope
Joyce Hsieh
Feng-chyi Jiang
Wang Tien Jou
Debra Kohn
Alex Kuciw
Chun-lin Kuo
Sung-yung Kuo
Ta-peng Lan
Tony Lan
Jim Leavitt
Ang Lee
Ching-fu Lee
Fu-hsiung Lee
Hsi-chien Lee
Hsiang-hsiu Lee
Jonathan Lee
Ker-hsin Lee
Wei-min Lee
Wen-chan Lee
Kuo Li-chi
Eric Liljestrand
Chang-cheng Lin
Huei-yi Lin
Wang Hui Ling
Teddy Lo
Tony Lo
Hector Martignon
Pam Martin
Kelly Miller
Simon Nucktern
Yang-sheng Ou
David Packer
Tom Paul
Sarah Plant
Sarah Plant
David Pultz
Mario Rodriguez
James Schamus
James Schamus
Steve Silkensen
Mary Jane Skalski
Tim Squyres
Reilly Steele
Patricia Sztaba
Stan Sztaba
Cheng-kuan Tang
Michael Taylor
Darcine Thomas
Giuseppe Verdi
Cheng-teng Wang
Hsiao-yu Wang
Sasha Waters
Dean Wilson
Anthony Wong
Lang-tsung Yang
Ta-ching Yang
Yu-yu Yang
Daryl Yau
Cao Ying Ying
Zhi-hwa Young
Peng Yu
Ching-kuo Yuan
Photo Collections
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Foreign Language Film
Articles
Eat Drink Man Woman
Ang Lee opens Eat Drink Man Woman (1994) on brief shots of Taipei, a bustling modern city of skyscrapers and busy streets crammed with cars, mopeds and pedestrians, before he sweeps us out of the city and into the rural home of Old Chu, a semi-retired master chef in one of Taipei's most respected restaurants. Here there is no rush, only the loving attention lavished on an elaborate Sunday meal for his three daughters. Chu, an aging widower, is most at home in the kitchen, preparing and cooking and readying for presentation. He's less sure of himself presiding over the social ritual of the family dinner, which plays out with strained politeness. The muted tension reflects no animosity, merely a disconnection as the grown women follow their paths and keep their personal feelings and struggles hidden from one another.
Jia-Ning (Yu-Wen Wang), the youngest daughter, is a student who works part time as a fast food clerk (it's not a statement of rebellion, merely a reflection of the changing urban culture) and falls for her best friend's neglected and frustrated boyfriend. The eldest, high school math teacher Jia-Jen (Kuei-Mei Yang), took over the maternal responsibilities since the death of their mother, at the cost of her romantic life. She still mourns a lost love from years before and her frustration and resentment simmers under her brittle façade of authority both at home and at school. Middle sister Jia-Chien (Chien-lien Wu) is a rising executive at a national airline company engaged in a casual affair with a younger man and determined to finally leave the rural family home. At the dinner that opens the film, she announces that she has bought an apartment in the city and will be moving out of the family home. It's not the last major event that will be announced at dinner. All four family members will face romantic trials that will change their lives dramatically and, true to form, they will hide their emotional lives until the ritualistic announcement at their weekly dinner.
Taiwan-born director Ang Lee trained first as an actor and then as a director in the United States. His first two features, Pushing Hands (1992) and The Wedding Banquet (1993), are wrapped up in the same collision of cultures that Lee experienced living in the U.S., reconciling the Chinese expectations of family responsibility and tradition with the far more open culture of American life. Both were shot in the U.S. with producer James Schamus (who became Lee's longtime writing and producing partner) and financed with Taiwanese backing. Both were enormously successful in Taiwan, and the latter became an independent hit in American that established his international reputation.
Eat Drink Man Woman, Lee's third feature, was his first to be shot and set in his homeland. Determined to establish himself as a Chinese filmmaker, Lee returned to the city of Taipei, where he grew up, and he drew from his own experiences. As a struggling filmmaker just out of college, Lee kept the family home and cooked the meals while his wife worked full time and he wrote scripts and pitched projects, trying to get his first feature produced. The idea of food as something to be shared is very Chinese, according to Lee. It became a natural focus for his story: food as a way of communication, as a social and familial experience. "The food and the banquet in the movie has really become a ritual," explained Lee in an interview. In this film, it often replaces communication.
Food is also central to Chu's identity. Unbeknownst to all except his closest friend and fellow chef Wen (affectionately known as Uncle Wen by Chu's daughters), he is losing his sense of taste. He has a lifetime of recipes and a passion for cooking, but like a painter going blind or a musician losing his hearing, he's an artist losing command of the sense that defines him. It's an obvious metaphor for aging and losing control, but in the hands of Lee it's more than just a symbol. Called from his family by Wen to save a culinary disaster at the restaurant, Chu arrives intent and confident and completely in his element, like a surgeon coming in to perform an emergency operation. As he steps in to the restaurant and snakes through the kitchen counters with laser-like focus, he's dressed in the chef's answer to surgical scrubs by one man and handed his glasses by another as all gather round to hear his assessment of the crisis and await his solution and instructions. This is the one area of life in which he still has control, yet he must rely on Wen to gauge his success when he whips up a last-minute entrée to replace a shark fin fiasco. All the cooking theory in the world is just that when faced with the results of real food on the human tongue.
The stories and emotional crises are familiar, the stuff of melodrama and romantic comedies. It's the perspective Lee gives this portrait of repressed desires and hidden lives played out in the rituals of meals and family gatherings that makes the film so engaging and appealing. According to producer and co-writer James Schamus, "Eat Drink Man Woman takes place really as the third of our "Father Knows Best" trilogy. We're really seeing the Confucian fatherly role model slowly turn into something else, something more modern." The American Schamus confesses that he found it difficult when he attempted to write from a Chinese perspective. "The more research I did, the worse the script got," he explains, so he transformed the characters (at least in his own mind) into a Jewish family and wrote from his own cultural experience. When Ang Lee read it, he responded: "It looks very Chinese." Yet, while social and cultural details are unique, the emotional lives and hard decisions are universally human.
The study of social manners and suppressed feelings became Lee's specialty. His next film was an adaptation of Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility (1995) starring Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet, Hugh Grant and Alan Rickman. The setting is half a world and two centuries removed from Eat Drink Man Woman but the (if you'll pardon the expression) sensibility is almost the same. Similarly, films as otherwise different as The Ice Storm (1997), Hulk (2003) and Brokeback Mountain (2005) ultimately concerned themselves with longing, emotional repression and a fear of unleashing the tumult of feelings kept under control.
Eat Drink Man Woman was a 1995 Oscar® nominee for Best Foreign Language Film and was remade as Tortilla Soup in 2001, which shifts the story, almost completely intact, to a Mexican-American family.
Producers: Kong Hsu, Li-Kong Hsu
Director: Ang Lee
Screenplay: Ang Lee, James Schamus, Hui-Ling Wang
Cinematography: Jong Lin
Music: Mader
Film Editing: Tim Squyres
Cast: Sihung Lung (Chu), Yu-Wen Wang (Jia-Ning), Chien-lien Wu (Jia-Chien), Kuei-Mei Yang (Jia-Jen), Sylvia Chang (Jin-Rong), Winston Chao (Li Kai), Chao-jung Chen (Guo Lun), Lester Chit-Man Chan (Raymond), Yu Chen (Rachel), Ah Lei Gua (Madame Liang).
C-123m. Letterboxed.
by Sean Axmaker
Eat Drink Man Woman
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Li Kong Hsu
Nominated for Excellence in Media's 1994 Golden Angel Award for best foreign film.
Nominated for the 1994 British Academy of Film & Television Arts (BAFTA) Award for Best Film Not in the English Language.
Winner of the 1994 award for Best Foreign Film from the National Board of Review.
Released in United States Summer August 3, 1994
Released in United States August 5, 1994
Expanded Release in United States August 12, 1994
Expanded Release in United States August 19, 1994
Expanded Release in United States August 26, 1994
Expanded Release in United States September 2, 1994
Expanded Release in United States September 9, 1994
Expanded Release in United States September 16, 1994
Expanded Release in United States September 23, 1994
Released in United States on Video June 27, 1995
Released in United States 1994
Released in United States July 1994
Released in United States September 1994
Released in United States 2001
Completed shooting December 30, 1993.
Began shooting November 20, 1993.
The third installment in Ang Lee's loosely-linked "father" trilogy which also includes "Pushing Hands" (Taiwan/USA/1992) and "The Wedding Banquet" (Taiwan/USA/1993). All three films star Sihung Lung.
Released in United States Summer August 3, 1994
Released in United States August 5, 1994 (Seattle)
Expanded Release in United States August 12, 1994
Expanded Release in United States August 19, 1994
Expanded Release in United States August 26, 1994
Expanded Release in United States September 2, 1994
Expanded Release in United States September 9, 1994
Expanded Release in United States September 16, 1994
Expanded Release in United States September 23, 1994
Released in United States on Video June 27, 1995
Released in United States 1994
Released in United States July 1994
Released in United States September 1994
Released in United States 2001 (Tribute)
The Country of Taiwan