Consuming Passions

This article is about the 1988 film. For the cooking show, see Consuming Passions (TV series). For the 2008 British film, see Consuming Passion.
Consuming Passions
Directed by Giles Foster
Produced by William P. Cartlidge
Written by Paul D. Zimmerman
Andrew Davies
(from a play Secrets
by Michael Palin and
Terry Jones)
Starring
Music by Richard Hartley
Cinematography Roger Pratt
Edited by John Grover
Running time
98 min
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Consuming Passions is a 1988 black comedy film which stars Vanessa Redgrave, Jonathan Pryce, and Sammi Davis and was directed by Giles Foster.

Outline

The film is based on Secrets by Michael Palin and Terry Jones[1] which was broadcast by the BBC as a television play in 1973. It tells the story of a chocolate factory preparing to launch a new luxury range, Passionelles. However, during the production run a worker falls into a vat of chocolate and dies, meaning human flesh is present in the first batch released. The horrified owners try and fail to recall the chocolates, but when they go on sale, they prove a surprise hit. Keen to continue the success, the developers try to replicate the taste with animal meat, but this fails miserably - leading them to realise human flesh is the key ingredient, and going to extreme lengths to obtain dead bodies to use in the chocolate.

The Time Out Film Guide describes the 'recipe' for this film and concludes that of the result: "the consistency should be lumpy and the taste insipid."[2]

Cast

References

  1. John Walker (ed) Halliwell's Film and Video Guide 2000, London: HarperCollins, 1999, p.177
  2. John Pym (ed.) Time Out Film Guide 2009, London: Aurum Press, 2008, p.210

External links

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