Boiling Point (2021) | Rotten Tomatoes (original) (raw)
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Critics Consensus
Gripping from start to finish, Boiling Point uses its bold formal approach to support a thrilling tightrope of a tale.
Christina Newland iNews.co.uk This film following one burnt-out chef's shift in a high-end restaurant makes for a tense, riveting drama . Rated: 5/5 Sep 19, 2024 Full Review Mark Kermode Observer (UK) A divine comedy barrelling towards inevitable tragedy, played out in hell's kitchen where someone is bound to get burned. Rated: 4/5 Jan 9, 2022 Full Review Nick De Semlyen Empire Magazine A fast-paced and hectic kitchen thriller that, though it tries to spin a few too many plates, pulls you deep into a fascinating, detailed world most of us know little about. Rated: 3/5 Jan 9, 2022 Full Review William Stottor Loud and Clear Reviews Consistently captivating, Boiling Point serves up a main course of tension with side portions of humour, effective drama and memorable acting. Rated: 4/5 Jul 18, 2024 Full Review David Nusair Reel Film Reviews ...a familiar endeavor that’s elevated by its top-notch performances and smattering of compelling set-pieces... Rated: 3/4 Jan 19, 2024 Full Review William Tucker But Why Tho? A Geek Community Boiling Point is intoxicating stress. Rated: 9/10 Jan 16, 2023 Full Review Read all reviews
Steven P If "Waiting" is the quintessential satire of the restaurant industry, then "Boiling Point" is it's brutally realistic counterpart. Pair these two films together, and you have the ultimate must-watch list for anyone in the restaurant business (perhaps add "The Menu" for dessert). Unlike many restaurant films that focus on the glamour and artistry of cuisine, Boiling Point considers the human cost of the industry...the long hours, toxic environments, abusive customers, and the emotional toll of working in a pressure cooker where one mistake can send everything into chaos—it’s all here. Lastly, be prepared for this one-take (!) film to affect you in the visceral sense. I felt so much a part of the kitchen, I actually felt my adrenaline rise as I watched the lazy but well-liked dishwasher spend 5 precious minutes taking out trash and smoking a cigarette. Somehow, this slid under my radar when it first came out, but thank the Gods of the Google Algorithm for recommending this film to me. I plan to watch this a second time; the attention to detail is stunning in this film, and I want to focus on that during my second viewing. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/06/25 Full Review Thomas S I wouldn't call it a "great" movie, but it sure does a hell of a job gluing you to your seat ! My adrenaline levels got up just by watching what hell a kitchen can turn into. I didn't see the dark turn coming at all, I'll soon watch it again to catch all the foreshadowing sprinkled along. The nut allergy was soooo predictable though, that kindof killed it a bit for me. The horrible guy at table 7 really made me think : "I'd probably quit rather than serving that kind of guy". Shows you how tough hospitality can be Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/05/25 Full Review Kyle M If done any other way, its current form acknowledged the disruptive alternative that doesn’t carry the brewing narrative it requires. Taut perfection across the desired aesthetics and utter professional display towards ethical empathy of further appreciation, with a hefty screenplay seamlessly executed in coordinative adjacence to its captivating capture. (A-) Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/05/25 Full Review Samuel W That which embodies anxiety, depression, mental health, and the duality of man in one single snippet of the first hour and a half of a brimming Christmas Day at a Chef’s Restaurant. Following Andy, a disgruntled, troubled chef as he tries to pull it together and keep his fellow cooks in-line, while trying to maintain a friendly atmosphere, fails to do so as he and the rest of his crew take every wrong step toward impending doom. Anxiety swells and the slight decline makes every single wrong move, every bad moment, and all the lines weigh so much more on the viewer. The most impressive thing they did was to have the camera roll all in one take, very 1917-esque, but rather than splicing the film to look like it was in one shot, it really all was in one shot. Without much blemish or mistake, I could not discern when they made a bad move in the script or if they were scripted to say what they said or stumble. That was the most impressive thing, that they can capture unadulterated, non-processed, raw human emotion in just one tiny snippet of a slice of these people’s lives. The subtext, the context, and everything unconsidered or otherwise came into place in the movie in some way, big or small, and made this world so much more lively. If I were to watch this ten times over, I doubt I’d be able to tell you exactly what made these details so extravagant and intricate, but the fact that they’re in the movie at all with just one camera, just one take, and only being dependent on their previous rehearsals, it is absolutely remarkable. Hats off to Boiling Point, the somber tale of Andy Jones. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/01/25 Full Review RONALD J It seems you can’t rely on Rotten Tomatoes because contrary to what Rotten Tomatoes says this is streaming on Peacock. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/01/25 Full Review Michael Antony A Mikey’s Film Review: Boiling Point (2021) Directed by Philip Barantini Starring Stephen Graham, Vinette Robinson, Ray Panthaki and Hannah Walters Set in a busy London restaurant kitchen and filmed in a non-stop single take (chosen from 3 such takes), Boiling Point presents us with a unique filmic perspective. A fly-on-the-wall look into the personal and professional lives of an over-worked, stressed out team as they try to get through their evening shift. Racist customers, cheeky ‘chancer’ influencers, over booking, forgotten food orders and nut allergies are only a few of the ‘minor’ challenges they face. The main protangonist Andy (brilliantly performed by Stephen Graham) has alcohol, drug and marriage problems. While some members of the team have to contend with English as a new language, the maître d' is being bullied and another of the more junior members is self harming. Almost everyone is strung out tired and on the verge of having a nervous breakdown… The pace rarely flags and the 92 minute running time flows quickly by. Perhaps too fast to establish and create a real connection and sympathy with the viewer. It’s a fascinating and mostly successful experiment. Some ideas linger long after the abrupt, bleak ending (there is no music throughout but a haunting song from Sam Fender fits perfectly over the final credits). I was totally engaged, but sadly for me a lasting emotional, sympathetic bond with the characters wasn’t quite there. Perhaps the follow up BBC series (2023) adds the missing gravitas and drama? As a result, it’s merely an interesting film with potential. Worth a look, even if only to compare with the vastly superior US TV series, The Bear. Mikey’s Film Rating: 3/5* Rated 3 out of 5 stars 12/16/24 Full Review Read all reviews
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Synopsis On the busiest night of the year at one of the hottest restaurants in London, charismatic, commanding head chef Andy Jones (Stephen Graham) balances along a knife's edge as multiple personal and professional crises threaten to destroy everything he's worked for. A surprise visit from a health and safety inspector sets the staff on edge as the overbooked hotspot begins to fill with guests. Jones alternately berates and cajoles his diverse staff, trying his best to diffuse tensions between management and his crew, while catering to the ridiculous demands of customers.
Director
Philip Barantini
Producer
Hester Ruoff, Bart Ruspoli
Screenwriter
Philip Barantini, James Cummings
Distributor
Saban Films
Production Co
Bromantics, White Hot Productions, Insight Media Fund, Urban Way Productions, Burton Fox Films, Matriarch Productions, Ascendant Films, Three Little Birds Pictures, Alpine Films
Rating
R (Some Drug Use|Pervasive Language)
Genre
Drama, Mystery & Thriller
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Nov 19, 2021, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Nov 23, 2021
Runtime
1h 32m
Aspect Ratio
Scope (2.35:1)
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