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Review: 'The Menu,' with Anya Taylor-Joy, serves up satire

鈥淲hat are we eating? A Rolex?鈥 So quips Margot (Anya Taylor-Joy) in Mark Mylod's 鈥淭he Menu鈥 as she waits with her date, Tyler (Nicholas Hoult), a devoted foodie who has landed them a reservation at the exclusive restaurant Hawthorne.
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This image released by Searchlight Pictures shows Ralph Fiennes, right, and Anya Taylor-Joy in a scene from the film "The Menu." (Eric Zachanowich/Searchlight Pictures via AP)

鈥淲hat are we eating? A Rolex?鈥

So quips Margot (Anya Taylor-Joy) in Mark Mylod's as she waits with her date, Tyler (Nicholas Hoult), a devoted foodie who has landed them a reservation at the exclusive restaurant Hawthorne. Like the opening of Rian Johnson's upcoming an eclectic, upscale bunch gathers eagerly on a dock to be ferried to a private island.

The movie, like their meal, unfolds as a series of courses, each more elaborate, and sinister, than the last. This is such rarified haute cuisine that entrees are promised that will not just represent food realms like protein and fungi but 鈥渆ntire ecosystems." A paired pinot wine is said to feature 鈥渁 faint sense of longing and regret.鈥 Julian Slowik (Ralph Fiennes), Hawthorne's celebrity chef, presides over the restaurant less like a cook than a military commander or, possibly, a god. 鈥淒o not eat,鈥 Slowik tells the diners. 鈥淭aste.鈥 He is, to say the least, not someone .

The world of fine dining has, for a while now, been ripe for satire. And 鈥淭he Menu鈥 happily supplies a heaping plate of it. The film, which opens in theaters Friday, may be aimed at somewhat low-hanging fruit and may ultimately not have all that much to chew on. But Mylod, who directed a number of the episodes to 鈥淪uccession,鈥 brings an icy, stylish flare in another kind of cleverly staged eat-the-rich comedy that 鈥 particularly thanks to the elite eye-rolling of Taylor-Joy and Fiennes' anguished artist 鈥 is still a very tasty snack.

The screenwriters Seth Reiss and Will Tracy, both veterans of the Onion, bake an amouse bouche of commentaries on class and service industry dynamics into an increasingly unhinged, and bloody, romp that doesn't offer too many surprises but consistently hits a satirical sweet spot.

Dining alongside Margo and Tyler are a trio of tech bros (Arturo Castro, Rob Yang, Mark St. Cyr), a movie star (John Leguizamo) and his assistant (Aimee Carrero), a prominent food critic and her editor (Janet McTeer, Paul Adelstein) and a married couple who are Hawthorn regulars (Reed Birney, Judith Light). From the beginning, the question of whether they're worthy of the brilliance they're about to be served is a pervasive tension 鈥 a feeling that accelerates absurdly and disturbingly as the evening wears on.

Elsa (Hong Chau), their guide and the restaurant's manger, certainly doesn't seem to think so. She deliciously tours them through all things Hawthorne, inviting the guests to watch the chefs in the open kitchen 鈥渨hile they innovate," announcing dishes like 鈥渁 breadless bread plate鈥 and generally stealing the show. Her pretentiousness is merciless and grows increasingly less subtle. In the ear of one complaining tech bro she whispers: 鈥淵ou will get less than you desire and more than you deserve.鈥

The same, perhaps, could be said of 鈥淭he Menu,鈥 a film with many tantalizing ingredients. Of all the patrons, Margot fits in the least, something that Julian recognizes immediately. His immaculately orchestrated morality play isn't intended to have a place setting for her. As we can see in how she winces when Tyler describes the 鈥渕outhfeel鈥 of a meal, she doesn't worship at the same altar of high cuisine. But even as 鈥淭he Menu鈥 teeters unevenly in its third act and things get gruesomely less appetizing, its greasy last bites succeed in capturing one common aspect of molecular gastronomy: 鈥淭he Menu鈥 will leave you hungry.

鈥淭he Menu鈥 a Searchlight Pictures release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for strong/disturbing violent content, language throughout and some sexual references. Running time: 107 minutes. Three stars out of four.

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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at:

Jake Coyle, The Associated Press

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