En doft av kärlek - Pot au Feu currently has an average rating of 7.4 out of 10 and has been rated by 47 users on our platform.
Framförallt känns filmen välkomnande och som en enda massiv dessert som i små episoder tillfredsställer.
Read full review at Kulturbloggen...klart sevärd film, om ett vardagsliv i köket som berör.
Read full review at AftonbladetUtsökt kärleksförklaring till det franska köket.
Read full review at FilmtoppLåt Tran Anh Hungs kärleksförklaring till kokkonsten vägleda dig och påminna dig om hur tidskrävande äventyr tillsammans vid spisen gärna spiller över i sängen.
Read full review at Svenska DagbladetDet hårda slitet i den rika gourmeten Dodin Bouffants (Benoît Magimel) stora kök med glänsande kittlar och dörrar som står öppna mot grönsakslandet skildras som ren lycka.
Read full review at Dagens NyheterEn film för den som ser stor mening i matlagning. Stilla berättat, utan musik, men med stor intensitet i den delade passionen för mat.
...detta är en kärleksförklaring till matlagningskonst på hög nivå.
Read full review at Göteborgs-PostenAmazing sound but still not worth the effort somehow. The environment is beautiful but the heat between the 2 main characters never takes off.
Tran Anh Hung's culinary romance is so vividly and lovingly made, you’ll swear you can smell and taste every shot.
Read full review at The TelegraphThere is charm and delicacy here and Magimel and Binoche perform impeccably...
Read full review at The GuardianThe love of food and romance are viewed as all one singular desire for everything beautiful and fleeting in life.
Read full review at Slant MagazineThe film doesn’t strain for meaning or metaphor, instead just showing us the events over a certain period and allowing us to sample and chew over them as we would heaving plate of delicious food.
Read full review at Little White Lies...deliciously subversive tale of later life love.
Read full review at The GuardianInevitably, food is also an essential part of the film, and rarely has cooking and its resultant concoctions been so evocatively presented in any art form.
Read full review at The Austin Chronicle...there's satisfaction when you watch the guests in the dining room taste the food, savoring every bite, not even needing to say a word. The pleasure is palpable.
Read full review at Roger Ebert