God of Cookery
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God of Cookery | |
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Directed by | Stephen Chow Li Lik-Chi |
Written by | Stephen Chow Kok Tak-Chiu Lou Man-Sang Tsang Ken-cheong |
Starring | Stephen Chow |
Cinematography | Jingle Ma |
Editing by | Cheung Ka-Fai |
Release date(s) | 1996 |
Running time | 95 min. |
Country | Hong Kong |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
God of Cookery (食神 Sik San in Cantonese, Shi Shen in Mandarin) is a 1996 Hong Kong comedy directed by acclaimed Hong Kong comedian, actor and director, Stephen Chow, best known in the west for his films Shaolin Soccer and Kung Fu Hustle.
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[edit] Synopsis
God of Cookery is the story of celebrity chef Stephen Chow (Chow, although it is to be noted that the Chinese characters used for Chow's name in the movie is different from the one that Chow uses in real life), who, as it is later revealed, knew very little about cooking himself and was willing to hawk any product for a price. Because of Chow's apparent culinary skills, he was known as the "God of Cookery", and run not only a successful business, but appeared as a judge for (rigged) culinary competitions.
When rival businessman and accomplished chef Bull Tong (Vincent Kok), who had posed as one of Chow's fans, reveals to the world that Chow is a fraud, Chow finds that the business empire he had built being taken away from him. Ruined, Chow begins living on the streets, in an area known as Temple Street, where two rival street vendors, Goosehead (Siu-Kei Lee) and Turkey (Karen Mok), were about to conduct gang warfare to see which vendor could sell which of the two best-selling dishes, beef balls and "pissing" shrimp. Chow manages to unite the two rival vendors by combining the two dishes into a new dish, titled "Pissing Beef Balls", that the three of them could sell together. The dish becomes a huge success, and the vendors convince Chow to enroll in a culinary school (in order to reclaim the title he had lost) - but not before he discovers that Turkey, idolized Chow as the "God of Cookery", and literally received her scarred appearance due to her devotion.
The success of the "Pissing Beef Balls" did not go unnoticed by Bull Tong, the new "God of Cookery" - to the point that he believed that the success may unseat him from his position. Thus, he arranged for an assassin to kill Chow on the way to the culinary school. The assassin, however, does not succeed, as Turkey took the bullet instead, but led many to believe that Chow and Turkey had died on the way. It would be the end of the film before it is revealed that Turkey survived, but for Chow, his story continues.
Months later, Bull Tong enters the "God of Cookery" competition (a parody of Iron Chef) as the heavy favorite to retain the title (largely due to his clout over the judges). However, he is shocked to learn that Chow had apparently survived, and would be cooking in the competition. Chow arrives in time for the start of the competition, and reveals to Tong (and the audience) what had happened: Chow escaped the assassin's second bullet, and would eventually find his way to a Shaolin temple where a monk by the name of Wet Dream (a spoof on the chinese word for nocturnal spermatorrhea) nursed him back to health. However, Wet Dream would not allow Chow to leave the temple until he was well-versed in the ways of the Shaolin arts - a point that was made moot when it was revealed that the culinary school he was going to attend was, in fact, the temple's kitchen - the same kitchen that Bull Tong had trained in for years.
While training, however, he continually mourned for Turkey, and was overcome with remorse over his careless treatment of her. This had caused Chow's hair to grow white, and eventually allowed him to leave the temple. The competition between Chow and Tong would afterwards begin in earnest, with the two attempting to make identical Buddha Jumping Wall dishes. Each chef would attempt to sabotage the other's dish in a comedic wuxia fashion by attacking the other using their ingredients or kitchen implements, but Tong would prevail when he caused Chow's container to explode. With few materials and little time remaining, he prepares a simple dish of char siu rice with onion, and an egg, known together as sorrowful rice - the same dish that Turkey first gave to him while living in the streets. Although Chow's "Sorrowful Rice" would be the better dish, Tong's clout over the judge Nancy Sit (thru blackmailing) led her to declare Tong the winner - before he is killed through divine intervention and turning on Chow former manager into a dog, it also revealed that Chow in the former life was an assistant to the Kitchen God before being sent to earth as a punishment.
After the competition, Chow met up his friends in Temple Street where it was revealed by Goosehead that Turkey survived the assassination and also had had plastic surgery on her face and teeth, becoming a beauty.
[edit] Trivia
- Shortly after the film's success in Hong Kong, Stephen Chow entered into negotiations with Fox to create a remake of God of Cookery to be released in the West. It was to be co-written, co-produced, and directed by Chow, and to feature Jim Carrey in the lead role. Chow eventually backed out of the deal after becoming weary of Hollywood bureaucracy.
- "Pissing Beef Balls" are now available in many noodle houses in China.
- This movie is also a tribute to those Japanese cooking anime, where the character have outlandish "special technique" to cook food in front of an enthusiastic audience and a dramatic professional food taster.
- The interrogation scene about "Who shouted mix them up to a pissing beef balls" was done in one take, as one of the actors, Pak Leung Kam, excused himself (to the off screen director) when he got the line wrong.
- The day dream sequence with Christy Chung is a parody of an 80's famous Hong Kong commercial about single packaged Vitasoy Lemon Tea. The only difference is that in the original it was a schoolgirl following a guy she fancies in school.
- At the time of the filming, Stephen Chow and Karen Mok were dating for a while.
[edit] Box Office
In its Hong Kong theatrical run, the film grossed HK $15,887,030.
[edit] Cast
- Stephen Chow as Stephen Chow
- Karen Mok as Turkey
- Vincent Kok as Bull Tong
- Christy Chung as the girl in the dream sequence (cameo)
- Nancy Sit as herself (cameo)
- Lee Kin-yan as the nose-picking transvestite (cameo)
[edit] See also
- The Chinese Feast (1995)