49 out of 72 people found the following comment useful :- Loved it, 22 juillet 2007
Author:
Danielle de Syracuse, NY
I loved the German film (Mostly Martha) that is the basis of this
remake, and I was worried that the transition to Hollywood would spoil
all the things that made the original so delightful. But I was very
pleasantly surprised. There is a substantial plot change, but it
doesn't wreck the movie, and a lot of the original dialog is kept
word-for-word. Even if you know nothing about the original film, this
is a lovely romantic comedy. During the sold-out preview show that I
attended, people were laughing at the right moments and feeling moved
at the right times too, and the casting was spot on - Catherine
Zeta-Jones is perfect as the work-obsessed Kate dealing with the
disruption of her perfectly-ordered life and Aaron Eckhart is
irresistible with his mop of hair and those dimples. And what can you
say about Abigail Breslin except that she's the most natural child
actor working today. If you like romantic comedies, you'll like this
one - it's smart, charming and you're rooting for the couple from the
minute they meet. I can recommend this without reservations.
34 out of 45 people found the following comment useful :- No Reservations About "No Reservations", 9 août 2007
Author:
Brent Trafton de Long Beach, CA
"No Reservations" is not a great film, nor does it pretend to be. It is
very predictable and follows the formula used in countless other
movies. Despite that, it give you everything you want from this type of
film and is better than many of the sequels that have come out this
year.
Catherine Zeta Jones is as beautiful as ever. There is a nice dose of
Verdi and Puccini opera arias, and Abigail Breslin steals the film like
she did with "Little Miss Sunshine." I have not liked Aaron Eckert in
the past, but in this film he brings happiness to the otherwise dour
Zeta Jones.
Some of the professional critics said they like the original German
film "Mostly Martha" better, but I thought that "No reservations"
improved on the original in every possible way. The only valid
criticism I could find was that Catherine Zeta Jones is too beautiful
to be believable as a lonely chef. That is a flaw I can live with.
If you are looking for a break from the so-called Summer "action"
films, "No Reservations" is not very original, but it certainly fits
the bill. The only drawback is that you will definitely leave the
theater feeling really hungry for good food.
48 out of 75 people found the following comment useful :- Bland, 1 septembre 2007
Author:
nuttymoo722 de United Kingdom
Well, i must admit, when i saw the trailer for this movie, i was
looking forward to it. I am generally a fan of light hearted romantic
comedies and from the trailer, thats the impression i got of this
movie. However, i spent most of the movie waiting for the comedy to
begin. Although there were a couple of amusing scenes, in general the
outlook of the movie was quite depressing.
I also found it difficult to fall in love with any of the characters as
they all seemed a little underdeveloped, the time which the director
could have used exploring the characters taken up by a needless overuse
of Opera, making the movie feel dragged out and slow.
All in all, although there are some touching scenes, the trailer is
quite deceptive and i would only suggest you go watch this if there is
really nothing else that tickles your fancy.
Not fantastic, and as i have said before; Bland.
33 out of 49 people found the following comment useful :- Some Great Cinematography in This Family Drama, 21 juillet 2007
Author:
tabuno de utah
Unlike the trailers imply for this movie, "No Reservations" is more a
family drama rather than a romantic comedy. There is lavish bitter dark
pathos of death in the beginning of the movie and the more colorful
look at restaurant cooking while there are bits of humor scattered like
sweets throughout the movie. There are some amazing close up scenes
that really grab the attention of the audience with the emotions and
captivating context of the scenes, the color motif is brilliant.
Overall, the script is basic and mostly predictable with some good
tie-ins and closures. It's Catherine Zeta Jones that really makes this
movie deliciously sparkle. Entertaining and fun for the summer with
good flashes of cooking on part with "Ratatouille" that came out just a
little earlier. As an aside, Patricia Clarkson had an earlier role in
another cooking film, a romantic, comedy fantasy entitled "Simply
Irresistible" (1999) with Sarah Michlle Geller in a more gracious
supporting role. Seven out of Ten Stars.
18 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :- Go and see the original "Bella Martha", 30 juillet 2007
Author:
pefrss de Las Vegas
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Go to the video store and get the original. I do not understand why
Hollywood has that need to take a perfect foreign movie and remake it.
"Mostly Martha" or "Bella Martha" has a much better cast. Beginning
with the heroine Martina Gedeck, who convinced me much more in the role
of the work-obsessed perfectionist than the more famous Catherine Zeta
Jones, to the Italian cook and the niece suddenly deprived of her
mother and forced to live with an aunt, not fit for child-rearing.
In many ways, the American version of the movie is a copy of the German
original. They just exchanged the actors. However, they also changed
the story because it would have been difficult and not very believable
to materialize a father for the little girl in an American context.
I was thinking about that. Maybe the father could have been Puerto
Rican, or Cuban, or Mexican. Well, there are so many "guest workers" in
the U.S. Take your pick. But I doubt that any of them would have shown
up to shoulder the responsibility as the Italian father did in the
original. Therefore, the American movie leaves that part out but keeps
the Italian cook. And by doing this the whole story changes. In the
original "Martha" is so removed from reality that she thinks it is okay
to send her niece off with a complete stranger in a foreign country.
The American "Martha" is softer and therefore the movie is sweeter and
does not have that edge the German movie has.
In the original the "Italian" cook is not so good looking but much more
charming , the little girl is more of a brat but much more believable
and "Martha" is more representative of a career woman in today's world
than the watered down version we are presented in the American version.
And the whole opera music in the American version was very annoying. I
loved the Italian songs in the original and bought the CD.
Hollywood recognized that "Mostly Martha" was a great movie. Maybe the
distribution companies should have put it in more theaters or it should
have been shown in English without subtitles. In any case, the original
is so much better. By the way this reminds me of another remake. "Shall
we dance" is one of my favorites in the original Japanese version and
totally forgettable in the American version.
25 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :- Had a chance but....., 12 août 2007
Author:
markstarr21-1 de United States
This movie had all the potential and makings of a great feel good,
great love story...the cast is perfect, the visuals work, the original
premise works, the characters work....but the story moves from one
chess move to the next in a most predictable way...not one character in
the movie has any depth or has any depth explained by the director. All
we know about Catherine Zeta-Jones character is she is obsessed with
her world....nobody is allowed in and nobody challenges her
world...that much is obvious....but the remaining characters all have
their own dimensions that are really never explored or exposed....Aaron
Eckhart's character had so much more to offer to the story but wasn't
allowed, Abigail Breslin's character is so easy to understand that her
performance comes across somewhat predictable and phony....in the end
everything reverts back to the forced turbulent world of Catherine
Zeta-Jones which the audience never totally falls for....honestly, her
turbulent world is not much more than a portrayal of a selfish, self
obsessed, spoiled lady who most people would not have much time or
sympathy for in the real world. The director needed to make her a hero
and never does....in the end, it is Eckhart's character that ultimately
wins because he wins.
Not a lousy movie, just a movie that could have been a lot better with
more depth of personalities allowed in, explained and exposed.
Cheers
15 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :- Very likable even for a formula romcom, mainly because of the terrific casting, 30 septembre 2007
Author:
jemps918 de Philippines
Very likable even for a formula romcom, mainly because of the terrific
casting and performances of the actors.
The forever beautiful and talented Catherine Zeta-Jones (Chicago, The
Mask of Zorro) is spot on as Kate, a workaholic chef at hoity toity 22
Bleeker. Kate unexpectedly inherits her niece Zoe, played tremendously
well by Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine). Real-life motherhood
must have enabled Zeta-Jones to show her softer side with the restraint
her character called for.
Aaron Eckhart (Thank You for Smoking, Black Dahlia) is Nick, the
Italian-trained, opera-singing, charismatic new chef who invades Kate's
precision-perfect French kitchen. Nick is Kate's quintessential
opposite and eventually helps her sort out her trust issues and even
enhances her parenting skills.
It is refreshing to see CZJ back on the silver screen where she
belongs, and playing a non-glamorous character for once, even sans
makeup in some scenes. At 38 years old, that is a brave feat indeed
(and this courage is consistent with all the flawed characters she
likes to play).
Her on screen chemistry with Eckhart is positively sizzling, and his
cockiness to her coolness effectively makes you forget about the trite
plot. While Zeta-Jones has also been criticized for being too beautiful
for the role of a lonely chef, that is actually one of the ironies of
life that this movie uncovers: beauty and talent doesn't really
guarantee bliss.
Despite the awful MTV-like montage of the trio grocery shopping and the
rest of the unspectacular elements, overall, the movie makes you feel
for the characters. You leave the cinema all warm and fuzzy, and that
makes the execution of No Reservations a success.
17 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :- Go see the original, 24 septembre 2007
Author:
nellgwyn21
I am a longtime fan of the original of this movie (Bella Martha/Mostly
Martha), and everything that makes that movie great and enjoyable to
watch is missing from this one. I miss the slow pace, the build-up of
characters and their style in small gestures, the dominance of lights
and moods and moves over dialog. I don't think that the story itself is
enough. Martha/Kate is more secluded, and Mario/Nick is not a clown. In
most of the cases the things that makes one scene great in the
original, its is not working in its copy here. The small alterations
take away the tension. My opinion is that you should go and see the
original. It'll worth the inconvenience of subtitles.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Disappointing Entrée with an Appetizing Side Dish, 18 février 2008
Author:
isabelle1955 de Brit living in California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
There really is only one reason to watch this barely adequate and
utterly predictable movie about an uptight chef Kate Armstrong
(Catherine Zeta Jones) whose life changes when she inherits her
orphaned niece Zoe (Abigail Breslin) after her sister is killed in a
car wreck. And that reason is to watch Aaron Eckhart (Nick) who, with
his floppy haircut and appealingly laddish attitude, looks good enough
to slap between two slices of organic Pannini and eat with an olive oil
and balsamic vinaigrette dip and a few finely diced sun dried tomatoes.
He reminds me of Sean Bean. The thought that he might take his shirt
off really was the only thing that kept me awake until the end. He
removed his apron petulantly several times, but to my disappointment,
never went further.
I can't be too critical because I was watching it on pay per view at
home, so it hadn't cost me the price of two movie tickets at least, and
I was brought up to be grateful for small mercies. But really, this is
Rom Com at its most formulaic. Zeta Jones gives a very flat, monotonous
performance, she seemed utterly lacking in passion, (possibly due to
the amount of time she apparently spent in the cold store at the
restaurant? Thirty takes in there can't have been fun) and her face
barely changed expression throughout the whole movie. Abigail Breslin
was pretty good as the niece, she's such an appealing little girl that
it's quite impossible to criticize her, and anyway I loved her in
Little Miss Sunshine. Patricia Clarkson is always good value and I
can't really fault her performance as the restaurant owner, because she
seemed very underused, given what a good actor she is and how little
she had to do here. But the whole thing is just so clichéd, much of the
dialog banal, and the outcome so obvious. This is the cinematic
equivalent of paint by numbers, and Zeta Jones and Eckhart generate
little heat on screen.
Nick likes Italian food (doubtless indicating his burning inner
passion) and cooks to the sound of Puccini. His appearance in Kate's
kitchen at 22 Bleecker (the restaurant's name) predictably ruffles her
feathers but his uncanny ability to bond with her niece by cooking
pizza and building a Bedouin tent in the living room, brings Kate
around and, despite a few stumbles along the way, she ends up giving
him her prized possession. No, not her honour. But her recipe for
saffron sauce.
I'm being very unfair here, aren't I? I mean Rom Com is Rom Com, and we
all know what we are letting ourselves in for when we sign up. But does
it always have to be so mind numbingly dull?
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Like a made for TV movie, 22 août 2007
Author:
uubloguu de United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
The movie teasers shown on TV focused on the movie as a sharp, dark
comedy. I was disappointed.
The little girl's grief had the woman in the row behind me crying so
that her children were asking what was wrong. That part of the movie
was a downer for me. I wasn't expecting it.
Spoiler below: When a boss takes on her underling as her lover, she is
courting disaster, personally and professionally. I couldn't believe
the head chef would risk that since that kitchen was "her life".
There was a plodding "made for TV movie" aura when Catherine Zeta Jones
takes her niece to the first day of her new school. We see them
arriving, walking down the hallway, meeting the new teacher. Get on
with it!
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No Reservations (2007)
49 out of 72 people found the following comment useful :-

Loved it, 22 juillet 2007
Author: Danielle de Syracuse, NY
I loved the German film (Mostly Martha) that is the basis of this remake, and I was worried that the transition to Hollywood would spoil all the things that made the original so delightful. But I was very pleasantly surprised. There is a substantial plot change, but it doesn't wreck the movie, and a lot of the original dialog is kept word-for-word. Even if you know nothing about the original film, this is a lovely romantic comedy. During the sold-out preview show that I attended, people were laughing at the right moments and feeling moved at the right times too, and the casting was spot on - Catherine Zeta-Jones is perfect as the work-obsessed Kate dealing with the disruption of her perfectly-ordered life and Aaron Eckhart is irresistible with his mop of hair and those dimples. And what can you say about Abigail Breslin except that she's the most natural child actor working today. If you like romantic comedies, you'll like this one - it's smart, charming and you're rooting for the couple from the minute they meet. I can recommend this without reservations.
34 out of 45 people found the following comment useful :-

No Reservations About "No Reservations", 9 août 2007
Author: Brent Trafton de Long Beach, CA
"No Reservations" is not a great film, nor does it pretend to be. It is very predictable and follows the formula used in countless other movies. Despite that, it give you everything you want from this type of film and is better than many of the sequels that have come out this year.
Catherine Zeta Jones is as beautiful as ever. There is a nice dose of Verdi and Puccini opera arias, and Abigail Breslin steals the film like she did with "Little Miss Sunshine." I have not liked Aaron Eckert in the past, but in this film he brings happiness to the otherwise dour Zeta Jones.
Some of the professional critics said they like the original German film "Mostly Martha" better, but I thought that "No reservations" improved on the original in every possible way. The only valid criticism I could find was that Catherine Zeta Jones is too beautiful to be believable as a lonely chef. That is a flaw I can live with.
If you are looking for a break from the so-called Summer "action" films, "No Reservations" is not very original, but it certainly fits the bill. The only drawback is that you will definitely leave the theater feeling really hungry for good food.
48 out of 75 people found the following comment useful :-

Bland, 1 septembre 2007
Author: nuttymoo722 de United Kingdom
Well, i must admit, when i saw the trailer for this movie, i was looking forward to it. I am generally a fan of light hearted romantic comedies and from the trailer, thats the impression i got of this movie. However, i spent most of the movie waiting for the comedy to begin. Although there were a couple of amusing scenes, in general the outlook of the movie was quite depressing.
I also found it difficult to fall in love with any of the characters as they all seemed a little underdeveloped, the time which the director could have used exploring the characters taken up by a needless overuse of Opera, making the movie feel dragged out and slow.
All in all, although there are some touching scenes, the trailer is quite deceptive and i would only suggest you go watch this if there is really nothing else that tickles your fancy.
Not fantastic, and as i have said before; Bland.
33 out of 49 people found the following comment useful :-

Some Great Cinematography in This Family Drama, 21 juillet 2007
Author: tabuno de utah
Unlike the trailers imply for this movie, "No Reservations" is more a family drama rather than a romantic comedy. There is lavish bitter dark pathos of death in the beginning of the movie and the more colorful look at restaurant cooking while there are bits of humor scattered like sweets throughout the movie. There are some amazing close up scenes that really grab the attention of the audience with the emotions and captivating context of the scenes, the color motif is brilliant. Overall, the script is basic and mostly predictable with some good tie-ins and closures. It's Catherine Zeta Jones that really makes this movie deliciously sparkle. Entertaining and fun for the summer with good flashes of cooking on part with "Ratatouille" that came out just a little earlier. As an aside, Patricia Clarkson had an earlier role in another cooking film, a romantic, comedy fantasy entitled "Simply Irresistible" (1999) with Sarah Michlle Geller in a more gracious supporting role. Seven out of Ten Stars.
18 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :-

Go and see the original "Bella Martha", 30 juillet 2007
Author: pefrss de Las Vegas
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Go to the video store and get the original. I do not understand why Hollywood has that need to take a perfect foreign movie and remake it. "Mostly Martha" or "Bella Martha" has a much better cast. Beginning with the heroine Martina Gedeck, who convinced me much more in the role of the work-obsessed perfectionist than the more famous Catherine Zeta Jones, to the Italian cook and the niece suddenly deprived of her mother and forced to live with an aunt, not fit for child-rearing.
In many ways, the American version of the movie is a copy of the German original. They just exchanged the actors. However, they also changed the story because it would have been difficult and not very believable to materialize a father for the little girl in an American context.
I was thinking about that. Maybe the father could have been Puerto Rican, or Cuban, or Mexican. Well, there are so many "guest workers" in the U.S. Take your pick. But I doubt that any of them would have shown up to shoulder the responsibility as the Italian father did in the original. Therefore, the American movie leaves that part out but keeps the Italian cook. And by doing this the whole story changes. In the original "Martha" is so removed from reality that she thinks it is okay to send her niece off with a complete stranger in a foreign country.
The American "Martha" is softer and therefore the movie is sweeter and does not have that edge the German movie has.
In the original the "Italian" cook is not so good looking but much more charming , the little girl is more of a brat but much more believable and "Martha" is more representative of a career woman in today's world than the watered down version we are presented in the American version. And the whole opera music in the American version was very annoying. I loved the Italian songs in the original and bought the CD.
Hollywood recognized that "Mostly Martha" was a great movie. Maybe the distribution companies should have put it in more theaters or it should have been shown in English without subtitles. In any case, the original is so much better. By the way this reminds me of another remake. "Shall we dance" is one of my favorites in the original Japanese version and totally forgettable in the American version.
25 out of 35 people found the following comment useful :-

Had a chance but....., 12 août 2007
Author: markstarr21-1 de United States
This movie had all the potential and makings of a great feel good, great love story...the cast is perfect, the visuals work, the original premise works, the characters work....but the story moves from one chess move to the next in a most predictable way...not one character in the movie has any depth or has any depth explained by the director. All we know about Catherine Zeta-Jones character is she is obsessed with her world....nobody is allowed in and nobody challenges her world...that much is obvious....but the remaining characters all have their own dimensions that are really never explored or exposed....Aaron Eckhart's character had so much more to offer to the story but wasn't allowed, Abigail Breslin's character is so easy to understand that her performance comes across somewhat predictable and phony....in the end everything reverts back to the forced turbulent world of Catherine Zeta-Jones which the audience never totally falls for....honestly, her turbulent world is not much more than a portrayal of a selfish, self obsessed, spoiled lady who most people would not have much time or sympathy for in the real world. The director needed to make her a hero and never does....in the end, it is Eckhart's character that ultimately wins because he wins.
Not a lousy movie, just a movie that could have been a lot better with more depth of personalities allowed in, explained and exposed.
Cheers
15 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :-

Very likable even for a formula romcom, mainly because of the terrific casting, 30 septembre 2007
Author: jemps918 de Philippines
Very likable even for a formula romcom, mainly because of the terrific casting and performances of the actors.
The forever beautiful and talented Catherine Zeta-Jones (Chicago, The Mask of Zorro) is spot on as Kate, a workaholic chef at hoity toity 22 Bleeker. Kate unexpectedly inherits her niece Zoe, played tremendously well by Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine). Real-life motherhood must have enabled Zeta-Jones to show her softer side with the restraint her character called for.
Aaron Eckhart (Thank You for Smoking, Black Dahlia) is Nick, the Italian-trained, opera-singing, charismatic new chef who invades Kate's precision-perfect French kitchen. Nick is Kate's quintessential opposite and eventually helps her sort out her trust issues and even enhances her parenting skills.
It is refreshing to see CZJ back on the silver screen where she belongs, and playing a non-glamorous character for once, even sans makeup in some scenes. At 38 years old, that is a brave feat indeed (and this courage is consistent with all the flawed characters she likes to play).
Her on screen chemistry with Eckhart is positively sizzling, and his cockiness to her coolness effectively makes you forget about the trite plot. While Zeta-Jones has also been criticized for being too beautiful for the role of a lonely chef, that is actually one of the ironies of life that this movie uncovers: beauty and talent doesn't really guarantee bliss.
Despite the awful MTV-like montage of the trio grocery shopping and the rest of the unspectacular elements, overall, the movie makes you feel for the characters. You leave the cinema all warm and fuzzy, and that makes the execution of No Reservations a success.
17 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :-

Go see the original, 24 septembre 2007
Author: nellgwyn21
I am a longtime fan of the original of this movie (Bella Martha/Mostly Martha), and everything that makes that movie great and enjoyable to watch is missing from this one. I miss the slow pace, the build-up of characters and their style in small gestures, the dominance of lights and moods and moves over dialog. I don't think that the story itself is enough. Martha/Kate is more secluded, and Mario/Nick is not a clown. In most of the cases the things that makes one scene great in the original, its is not working in its copy here. The small alterations take away the tension. My opinion is that you should go and see the original. It'll worth the inconvenience of subtitles.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Disappointing Entrée with an Appetizing Side Dish, 18 février 2008
Author: isabelle1955 de Brit living in California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
There really is only one reason to watch this barely adequate and utterly predictable movie about an uptight chef Kate Armstrong (Catherine Zeta Jones) whose life changes when she inherits her orphaned niece Zoe (Abigail Breslin) after her sister is killed in a car wreck. And that reason is to watch Aaron Eckhart (Nick) who, with his floppy haircut and appealingly laddish attitude, looks good enough to slap between two slices of organic Pannini and eat with an olive oil and balsamic vinaigrette dip and a few finely diced sun dried tomatoes. He reminds me of Sean Bean. The thought that he might take his shirt off really was the only thing that kept me awake until the end. He removed his apron petulantly several times, but to my disappointment, never went further.
I can't be too critical because I was watching it on pay per view at home, so it hadn't cost me the price of two movie tickets at least, and I was brought up to be grateful for small mercies. But really, this is Rom Com at its most formulaic. Zeta Jones gives a very flat, monotonous performance, she seemed utterly lacking in passion, (possibly due to the amount of time she apparently spent in the cold store at the restaurant? Thirty takes in there can't have been fun) and her face barely changed expression throughout the whole movie. Abigail Breslin was pretty good as the niece, she's such an appealing little girl that it's quite impossible to criticize her, and anyway I loved her in Little Miss Sunshine. Patricia Clarkson is always good value and I can't really fault her performance as the restaurant owner, because she seemed very underused, given what a good actor she is and how little she had to do here. But the whole thing is just so clichéd, much of the dialog banal, and the outcome so obvious. This is the cinematic equivalent of paint by numbers, and Zeta Jones and Eckhart generate little heat on screen.
Nick likes Italian food (doubtless indicating his burning inner passion) and cooks to the sound of Puccini. His appearance in Kate's kitchen at 22 Bleecker (the restaurant's name) predictably ruffles her feathers but his uncanny ability to bond with her niece by cooking pizza and building a Bedouin tent in the living room, brings Kate around and, despite a few stumbles along the way, she ends up giving him her prized possession. No, not her honour. But her recipe for saffron sauce.
I'm being very unfair here, aren't I? I mean Rom Com is Rom Com, and we all know what we are letting ourselves in for when we sign up. But does it always have to be so mind numbingly dull?
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Like a made for TV movie, 22 août 2007
Author: uubloguu de United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
The movie teasers shown on TV focused on the movie as a sharp, dark comedy. I was disappointed.
The little girl's grief had the woman in the row behind me crying so that her children were asking what was wrong. That part of the movie was a downer for me. I wasn't expecting it.
Spoiler below: When a boss takes on her underling as her lover, she is courting disaster, personally and professionally. I couldn't believe the head chef would risk that since that kitchen was "her life".
There was a plodding "made for TV movie" aura when Catherine Zeta Jones takes her niece to the first day of her new school. We see them arriving, walking down the hallway, meeting the new teacher. Get on with it!
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