| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 652.1 |  | DSSDEV::RUST |  | Tue Sep 20 1994 09:02 | 8 | 
|  |     This is by the same director who did "The Wedding Banquet" (see note
    321). I enjoyed "Eat Drink Man Woman" very much - nice
    characterizations, lots of humor, spectacular food shots [if you see
    this before you've eaten you're likely to spend the whole movie
    drooling], and some very moving family-relationship scenes. Definitely
    recommended.
    
    -b
 | 
| 652.2 | held over and worth seeing | 39540::BROWN | On [real]time or else... | Fri Sep 23 1994 12:26 | 15 | 
|  | 	Another recommendation for this movie, which has been
	held over for another week at Wilton NH.  It is very
	rewarding to see a movie stake out its visual and
	emotional territory and then explore it with skill
	and compassion. EDMW is put together with the same
	care as one of Master Chef Chu's dishes.  It's the
	lapidary quality of the movie's structure that really
	gives the frequent suprises their kick.
	And even though we'd eaten before seeing the film,
	I spent most of the 2+ hours trying to resist the
	impulse to run out for Chinese food.
	Ron
 | 
| 652.3 | yep, worth seeing | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Mon Sep 26 1994 11:44 | 9 | 
|  |     The wife and I saw this Saturday at the Wilton Theatre. It was sold out;
    we got the last two regular seats, right in the front row. They brought
    in some extra chairs to accommodate a few more patrons, but some folks
    still got shut out.
    
    It was a good movie. My wife REALLY liked it. Plus, she guessed most of
    the surprises ahead of time, including the big one.
    
      John
 | 
| 652.4 |  | VNABRW::RHOTON_J | John Rhoton @AUI - DTN 754-2345 | Thu Feb 09 1995 06:40 | 15 | 
|  |     
    No argument with any of the previous replies - this was a very
    enjoyable film.  A nice blend of melodramatic and humour.
    
    Some credits and details not mentioned in the previous replies:
    
    The movie is Taiwanese in Mandarin, directed by Ang Lee (1994) and
    takes place in Taipeh.
    
    Chu (Father)				Sihung Lung
    Jia Jen (First daughter - teacher)		Kuei-Mei Yang
    Jia Chien (Second daughter - businesswoman)	Chien-Lien Wu
    Jia Ning (Third daughter - fast-food worker)Yu-Wen Wang
    
    John
 | 
| 652.5 | Thumbs up | KAOFS::P_CHAPLINSKY |  | Mon Jun 10 1996 16:56 | 11 | 
|  |     I rented this movie over the weekend and simply loved it.  I am
    fond of foreign films so I was pleased to see this one on the shelf.
    
    As previous noters mentionned, one of the main characters, Mr. Chu,
    father of the three daughters, is a Master Chef.  He pretty well
    cooks throughout the film.  On Sunday, I happened to be in the Chinese
    district of our city... so that's what I made for supper. 
    
    I was happy with this rental.
    
    PChaplinsky
 |