
Film critic and food aficionado Erich Van Dussen â89 offers recommendations for some delicious watch parties.
by Robyn Rime
When it comes to food porn, âBig Nightâ is the gold standard.
âIt checks every box,â says Erich Van Dussen â89, director of communications at Hillside, a multistate nonprofit based in Rochester, and â more to the point â longtime movie reviewer for Messenger Post and other upstate New York media outlets. âItâs a legitimately good movie, it has a big cast that everyone can get excited about, and you can positively smell the food coming off the screen.â
The movie is also easy to find on streaming platforms, a feature that could make it the main course when hosting your own movie-and-food night. Whether you indulge in a marathon Italian dinner or invent an unforgettable homemade pie, watching movies about food while eating the dishes they inspire can be as satisfying as a happy ending and a full belly.

Van Dussenâs recommendations follow, but he has one request before the curtain goes up: Try to love the film as much as the food.
âBuild your party in such a way that people get to watch the movie front to back,â he says. âThe thought of jumping up off the couch to go into the kitchen while great stuff is happening on screen ⊠it just breaks my heart a little bit. You can honor the integrity of the art that youâre watching and still have fun and eat great food. The movies should be more than inspiration for food â they are inspiring all by themselves.â
âBig Nightâ(1996)
For Van Dussen, the movie-and-food conversation begins and ends with Big Night. âItâs an earthy story about two brothers (played by Stanley Tucci and Tony Shalhoub) who are struggling to keep their authentic Italian restaurant open despite the fact that customers just want spaghetti all the time.â In an all-or-nothing, do-or-die event â the big night of the title â the brothers invite the whole community to come and enjoy their food.
The âBig Nightâ centerpiece dish is a timpano, a giant cauldron of dough stuffed with layers of pasta, various meats, mozzarella, sautĂ©ed vegetables ⊠a visual and literal feast.
âI didnât know much about real Italian food before I first watched ‘Big Night.’ It was insane and glorious,â says Van Dussen. âMaking a timpano would be an opportunity to kick out the stops with a bunch of friends and have some great Italian food ⊠but maybe you could find somebody to make the dough first. That shell is probably a Wagnerian opera all by itself.â
Culinary cinĂ©astes can find the â at Food52.com.
âChefâ (2014)
Some lighter fare on Van Dussenâs film menu is âChef,â the story of a frustrated restaurant chef who abandons fine cuisine and buys a food truck. During a cross-country road trip thatâs peppered with pit stops for beignets or barbeque, director/star Jon Favreau reconnects with his family and rediscovers the food that makes him happy.
âAs much as âBig Nightâ has a love affair with food, it wants us to admire the people doing the cooking more than it wants us to learn from them,â says Van Dussen. âIn âChef,â we watch Favreauâs character give such loving focus to the assembly of the food â building a grilled cheese sandwich, testing the heat above the griddle âthat you feel like you could follow along.â
The food truckâs Cuban sandwiches âare just the kind of stuff youâd want to serve at a party,â he adds, with their thick layers of roasted pork, ham, Swiss cheese, pickles and mustard on Cuban bread. Opinions differ on whether the pork must be mojo-marinated or whether Sunday dinner leftovers will do. But all agree a true Cubano needs pressing to fuse the flavors â which makes a âChefâ watch party the perfect time to dust off your panini press.
A â is available on BingingWithBabish.com.
âJulie and Juliaâ (2009)
Next up is âJulie and Julia,â based on the true story of a woman inspired to cook and blog her way through every recipe in Julia Childâs â.â The film alternates between modern-day Julie (Amy Adams), painfully recreating one gourmet dish at a time, and Julia Child (Meryl Streep), wholeheartedly enjoying the food, the lifestyle and the culinary paradise of Paris in the 1950s.
ââJulie and Juliaâ lets you experience the kind of cuisine that might feel threatening to the average contemporary cook,â says Van Dussen. âYou could buy some decadent ingredients and a lot of red wine to cook with ⊠although you probably donât want to chop all the onions that Julia Child does in the film.â
Ambitious cooks can find an adapted version of on Epicurious.com.
âWaitressâ (2007)
For dessert, Van Dussen suggests âWaitress,â an unlikely confection starring Keri Russell as a young woman trapped in a small town, an abusive marriage and a dead-end diner job. And yet, says Van Dussen, itâs absolutely charming. âI give it credit for tackling its heavier subjects with a deliberately fairy-tale tone. Itâs so lightweight that it kind of floats away ⊠but if youâre going to have movies about Cuban sandwiches and giant stuffed dough and boeuf bourguignon, why not end with a movie about making pies?â
The film is âbasically a cookbook narrative about creating wacky, interesting and apparently â if the movie is to be believed â very simple-to-produce pies with creative concepts,â says Van Dussen. Inspired by her challenging life, for instance, Russellâs character makes the Pregnant Miserable Self-Pitying Loser Pie (âLumpy oatmeal with fruitcake mashed in. FlambĂ©ed, of course.â).
Then thereâs the Strawberry Chocolate Oasis Pie. âIt could solve all the problems of the world, that pie,â says a diner customer in the film. âItâs a thing of beauty â how each flavor opens itself one by one, like a chapter in a book. First, the flavor of an exotic spice hits you, just a hint of it. And then youâre flooded with chocolate, dark and bittersweet, like an old love affair. And finally strawberry, the way strawberry was always supposed to taste but never knew how.â

Try This at Home: Strawberry Chocolate Oasis Pie, adapted from Love and Olive Oil
For Crust
- Nonstick vegetable oil spray
- 6 tablespoons (3/4 stick) unsalted butter
- 1 ounce bittersweet (not unsweetened) or semisweet chocolate, chopped
- 7 ounces chocolate wafer cookies (about 30 cookies)
- 1 pint strawberries, trimmed and halved
For Filling
- 2/3 cup sugar
- 1/4 cup cornstarch
- 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
- 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- Pinch of salt
- 6 large egg yolks
- 2 1/2 cups whole milk
- 6 ounces bittersweet (not unsweetened) or semisweet chocolate, chopped
- 1/2 tablespoon bourbon
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Directions
- Lightly spray a 9-inch pie dish with nonstick spray.
- Place the butter and chopped chocolate in a microwave safe bowl and heat on high for 30 seconds or until just melted. Stir until smooth.
- Finely grind cookies in processor. Add chocolate mixture and process until crumbs are evenly moistened.
- Press crumb mixture into prepared pie dish. Freeze until firm, about 30 minutes.
- Arrange strawberry halves in a single layer in the bottom of the crust.
- For filling, whisk sugar, cornstarch, cocoa powder, ginger, nutmeg, and salt in a heavy medium saucepan to combine.
- Whisk in egg yolks to form thick paste.
- Gradually whisk in milk, then whisk over medium-high heat until mixture thickens and boils for 1 minute. Remove from heat.
- Add chocolate and whisk until smooth.
- Whisk in bourbon and vanilla.
- Cool 5 minutes, whisking occasionally.
- Pour filling over strawberries until level with the top edge of the crust (you may not use all the filling).
- Chill until set, at least 2 hours and up to 1 day. Top with fresh whipped cream and more strawberries, if desired.
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Honorable Mentions of Movies With Great Food
Also worthy of consideration, says Van Dussen:
- âBabetteâs Feastâ (1987)
- âLike Water for Chocolateâ (1992)
- âMostly Marthaâ (2001) (âBut not the lousy English-language remake, âNo Reservations,ââ he says.)
- âRatatouilleâ (2007)
- âSoul Foodâ (1997)