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In Which City Is The Animated Disney Film Ratatouille Set?

"He'southward dying to become a chef."
―Tagline

Ratatouille is a 2007 American calculator-animated comedy film presented past Walt Disney Pictures, produced by Pixar Blitheness Studios and distributed by the last original film with the Buena Vista Pictures, which Cars was the last film for the Pixar 1991-2005 Vista era. Information technology tells the story of Remy (voiced past Patton Oswalt), a rat living in Paris who wants to be a chef. The moving picture was the eighth movie produced past Pixar, and was written and directed by Brad Bird, who took over from January Pinkava in 2005, and it was released on June 29, 2007 in the United States and on October 12, 2007, in the United Kingdom, to both widespread critical acclamation and box role success. It was the final Disney/Pixar film to use the 1995 Pixar exclusive Walt Disney Pictures logo, which started with Toy Story.

Plot

Remy is a rat who lives in the attic of a French country dwelling with his brother Emile and a rat pack led by his father Django. Gifted with a strong sense of smell and taste, Remy aspires to exist a gourmet chef, inspired past France's recently deceased pinnacle chef, Auguste Gusteau. Instead, however, his talent is put to work in sniffing for rat poison. When the pack is discovered by the home's occupant, they flee into the sewers; Remy becomes separated from the others and ends up marooned underneath Gusteau's eatery in Paris, conversing with a hallucination of the famous chef.

Urged on past Gusteau, Remy makes his mode up to the eatery's kitchen skylight to sentinel the staff in action. There, he observes Alfredo Linguini existence hired as an escuelerie past Skinner, the restaurant'southward electric current possessor, and Gusteau'southward former sous-chef. When Linguini spills some of the soup and attempts to recreate information technology using random ingredients, Remy is horrified, and falls into the kitchen; at that place, instead of escaping, he fixes the soup. Remy is caught past Linguini just equally Linguini is caught past Skinner, but earlier anyone can terminate the serving staff, the soup is served and Skinner notices a adult female tasting the soup. She and then calls the waiter and fires him but the woman asks her to encounter him. She turns out to be a food critic and that she likes the soup. Colette, the staff's only female person chef, convinces Skinner to retain Linguini, believing him to be the success behind the soup. Linguini takes Remy home instead of killing him, as Remy was the "little chef" who made the soup.

After a lot of training, Remy and Linguini overcome their language bulwark, with Remy pulling Linguini's pilus under his toque Blanche to command his limbs like a marionette. The pair successfully meets the challenges devised by Skinner and is able to serve his beginning e'er dish. Skinner, suspicious of Linguini'south talents, discovers that Linguini is actually Gusteau'south son and, by Gusteau'due south volition, is the rightful owner of the eating house; this revelation would ruin Skinner's plans to use Gusteau'south name to market a line of microwaveable meals and burn him in the process. Remy discovers the documents and takes them to Linguini, who after fires Skinner and takes control of the eating house. Linguini and Colette brainstorm to develop a romantic bond, leaving Remy feeling left out and taken for granted. Remy finds Emile in the eatery's trash, and Remy is reunited with the pack. Django warns Remy that humans and rats volition never get along, only Remy does not believe him. Meanwhile, Remy begrudgingly feeds Emile and his friends by stealing from the kitchen'due south pantry equally the nights laissez passer.

Anton Ego, a food critic whose by review toll Gusteau'south one of its star ratings, announces he will review the eatery again the next solar day based on its rising success. Under the pressure of Ego'due south pending inflow, Linguini has a falling out with Remy, causing Remy to retaliate past leading a raid on the kitchen'due south nutrient stocks that night. Linguini catches the rats in the act and chases them all out, including Remy, feeling betrayed. Remy, dejected, is captured by Skinner. In his muzzle, Remy has one final conversation with his phantom Gusteau, who tells him that the rat never needed his guidance, and at that moment, he is freed past Django and Emile. Remy returns to the kitchen, where a frantic Linguini apologizes and asks Remy back to help. Linguini then reveals the truth about Remy to the staff, who walk out feeling deceived and betrayed; Colette later returns after recalling Gusteau's motto: "Anyone tin cook."

Impressed by his son'due south determination, Django organizes the residuum of the pack to help out in the kitchen. They throw Skinner and a health inspector, bound and gagged, into the freezer when they try to interfere. Linguini uses roller skates to expect on all the tables past himself, while the rats (nether Remy'southward management) work together to prepare a variation on ratatouille for Ego. Ego is amazed by the dish, which evokes babyhood memories of his mother's cooking, and asks to come across the chef. Linguini and Colette wait until all the other customers leave to introduce Remy to Ego. Although initially disbelieving, Ego is brought into the kitchen to watch Remy recreate the dish; he leaves without whatever further comment. To everyone's surprise, Ego writes a glowing review of the repast the next 24-hour interval, declaring Remy to be "zilch less than the finest chef in French republic."

In the dénouement, Gusteau's is airtight down by the health inspector, and Ego loses his job and his credibility equally a food critic for praising a eating house filled with rats. However, he eagerly funds a new restaurant run by Linguini and Colette, featuring dining areas for both humans and rats and a kitchen designed for Remy to proceed cooking. The concluding scene shows a long queue outside and a sign displaying a rat wearing a toque and holding a spoon, above it, the proper noun "La Ratatouille" every bit the rat colony settles into their new home in the bistro's cranium.

Cast

  • Patton Oswalt as Remy
  • Lou Romano equally Alfredo Linguini
  • Janeane Garofalo equally Colette Tatou
  • Ian Holm as Chef Skinner
  • Peter O'Toole as Anton Ego
  • Brad Garrett as Auguste Gusteau
  • Brian Dennehy equally Django
  • Peter Sohn as Emile
  • Will Arnett as Horst
  • Julius Callahan as Lalo and Francois
  • James Remar as Larousse
  • John Ratzenberger as Mustafa
  • Teddy Newton equally Talon Labarthe
  • Tony Fucile every bit Pompidou and Health Inspector
    • Jamie Oliver as Health Inspector (UK version)
  • Jake Steinfield as Git the Lab Rat
  • Brad Bird as Ambrister Minion
  • Stéphane Roux equally TV Narrator

Additional voices

  • Jack Bird every bit Teen Rat
  • Andrea Boerries as Street Adult female
  • Marco Boerries equally Food Snob #3
  • Lindsey Collins equally Abusive Girlfriend
  • Thomas Keller as Food Snob #ane
  • Brad Lewis as Calumniating Young man
  • Lori Richardson equally Nutrient Snob #2

Paris Loop Grouping

  • Jean Marie Ancher
  • Eric Aubrahn
  • Patrick Béthune
  • Anne Dolan
  • Jodi Forrest
  • Steve Gadler
  • David Gasman
  • Matthew Géczy
  • Randall Holden
  • Tercelin Kirtley
  • Marker Lesser
  • Sharon Mann
  • Marie-Eugénie Maréchal
  • Pascal Massix
  • Kentaro Matsuo
  • Marc Pérez
  • Doug Rand
  • Stéphane Roux
  • Estelle Simon
  • Sybille Tureau
  • Allan Wenger

Listing of Cameos

  • The Pizza Planet truck appears on the bridge over the Seine River in the scene where Skinner chases Remy.
  • During a street scene, Bomb Voyage can be seen in the groundwork as a mime.
    • The boy watching the mime is young Anton Ego (from Anton's flashback).
  • Flop Voyage is also featured on the front page of the newspaper in which Colette reads Solene LeClaire'south review.
  • A shadow of Dug from the later Pixar feature Up tin be seen as Remy runs through an apartment.
  • When Linguini is trying to observe a place for Remy to hide, it is revealed his boxers take The Incredibles logo on them.
  • Several Chinese food boxes matching the one that Manny and Gypsy used to perform their human activity in A Bug's Life can exist seen inside Linguini's fridge.
  • A affiche with Mr. Incredible's super suit is briefly seen during the scene where Skinner chases Remy.
  • When Emile tries to feel the taste of the strawberry, a few notes from the song "Bella Notte" from Lady and the Tramp can be heard playing.
  • Some caviar seen in Gusteau's pantry is branded "Nemo", the name of Marlin'southward son in Finding Nemo.
  • When Linguini was going to fit his bike on the back of the Television receiver, he did non switch on the lights.
    • When it was off, Hal the cockroach from the adjacent Pixar characteristic WALL-East appeared.
  • Linguini has a soccer ball on his shelf, which is the same soccer ball from the robotic kid at the beginning of Monsters, Inc.
  • A113, which is a popular running gag for most Pixar features, appears on a tag on the tough rat's ear.
  • The quote from Skinner "You'RE FIRED!" to Linguini is a reference to Harry Tasker'south line to the terrorist Aziz in True Lies before the adversary is literally fired from a fighter jet, vaporizing him along with a helicopter filled with his accomplices.

Critical reception

Ratatouille received critical acclaim from critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 96% approving rating with an average rating of eight.50/x based on 251 reviews. The site's consensus reads: "Pixar succeeds over again with Ratatouille, a stunningly animated film with fast pacing, memorable characters, and overall good humor." Another review aggregation website Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 top reviews from mainstream critics, calculated a score of 96 out of 100 based on 37 reviews.

A. O. Scott of The New York Times called Ratatouille "a nearly flawless slice of pop art, also as one of the most persuasive portraits of an artist ever committed to moving-picture show"; echoing the character Anton Ego in the film, he ended his review with a unproblematic "thank you lot" to the creators of the film. Wally Hammond of Time Out gave the film five out of 5 stars, maxim "A exam for tiny tots, a mite cornball and as male person-dominated as a modern kitchen it may be, merely these are mere quibbles almost this delightful addition to the Pixar pantheon." Andrea Gronvall of the Chicago Reader gave the movie a positive review, saying "Brad Bird'due south 2nd collaboration with Pixar is more ambitious and meditative than his Oscar-winning The Incredibles." Owen Gleiberman of Amusement Weekly gave the film a B, saying "Ratatouille has the Pixar technical magic without, somehow, the full Pixar season. It's Brad Bird's genial dessert, not so much incredible as only sweetly edible." Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the picture three and a half stars out of four, proverb "What makes Ratatouille such a hilarious and heartfelt wonder is the way Bird contrives to permit it sneak up on yous. And get a load of that score from Michael Giacchino, a perfect compliment to a delicious meal." James Berardinelli of ReelViews gave the film iii out of four stars, saying "For parents looking to spend time in a theater with their kids or adults who desire something lighter and less testosterone-oriented than the usual summer fare, Ratatouille offers a savory primary course." Christy Lemire of the Associated Press gave the film a positive review, maxim "Ratatouille is free of the kind of free pop-civilisation references that plague so many movies of the genre; information technology tells a story, it'due south very much of our globe but it never goes for the cheap, easy gag." Justin Chang of Variety gave the pic a positive review, maxim "The main chefs at Pixar take blended all the correct ingredients ― abundant verbal and visual wit, genius slapstick timing, a soupçon of Gallic sophistication ― to produce a warm and irresistible concoction."

Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune gave the moving-picture show 4 out of iv stars, maxim "The film may be animated, and largely taken up with rats, but its pulse is gratifyingly man. And you lot have never seen a estimator-blithe feature with this sort of visual brio and detail." Rafer Guzman of Newsday gave the picture 3 out of four stars, proverb "So many computer-blithe movies are advised, loud and popping with pop-culture comedy, but Ratatouille has the warm glow of a favorite book. The characters are more than the sum of their gigabyte-consuming parts ― they experience handcrafted." Roger Moore of the Orlando Sentinel gave the flick 3 out of five stars, saying "Has Pixar lost its magic recipe? Ratatouille is filled with fairly generic animated imagery, a few modest chases, a couple of expert gags, not a lot of laughs." Scott Foundas of LA Weekly gave the picture a positive review, proverb "Bird has taken the raw ingredients of an anthropomorphic-fauna kiddie matinée and whipped them into a exciting mash nearly cypher less than the principles of artistic creation." Colin Covert of the Star Tribune gave the film 4 out of 4 stars, saying "Information technology's not but the computer animation that is vibrantly iii-dimensional. It's also the well-rounded characters... I defy you lot to proper noun some other animated pic so inundation with superfluous dazzler." Steven Rea of The Philadelphia Inquirer gave the film iii and a half stars out of four, maxim "With Ratatouille, Bird once over again delivers not just a great, witty story, but dazzling visuals as well." Neb Muller of The Arizona Republic gave the film four and a half stars out of five, maxim "Like the burbling soup that plays a fundamental part in Ratatouille, the movie is a delectable blend of ingredients that tickles the palette and leaves y'all hungry for more."

Disney planned to produce a vino to market the release of Ratatouille. The California Wine Establish warned them not to advertise alcohol with cartoon characters, and the plan was scrapped.

Release

Home media

Master article: Ratatouille (video)

Ratatouille was released on DVD and Blu-ray on Nov 6, 2007, and was one of the highest selling DVDs of 2007.

On May 29, 2015, EliToons will return the five Pixar films similar Ratatouille (May 29), WALL-East (May xxx), Cars (May 31), Incredibles (June 5), and Finding Nemo (June 6) plus two DreamWorks like Over the Hedge (June 7) and Madagascar (June 13) on a weekend cake called "Movie Weekend".

Videos

Trivia

  • This is Brad Bird's 2nd Pixar film, therefore making this his tertiary afterwards Warner Bros.' The Iron Behemothic in 1999 and The Incredibles in 2004.
  • The film was originally set to be released in 2006. However, on December seven, 2004, the date was changed to 2007. This happened because Disney/Pixar changed the release appointment of Cars from November iv, 2005, to June 9, 2006, thus pushing the film to 2007.
  • In one scene, it is revealed that only the animals can hear each other talking, a instance of "audience filter". Ironically, Remy talks to Gusteau, a figment of Remy'southward imagination, and he is able to understand Remy.
  • Ratatoing, a 2007 Brazilian figurer graphics direct-to-video cartoon by Vídeo Brinquedo, is regarded by several outlets as a "ripoff" of Ratatouille.
  • This was the last Pixar moving picture to utilize the 1995 Pixar exclusive Walt Disney Pictures logo custom-made for the studio since Toy Story; starting with Pixar's later moving-picture show WALL-E in 2008, any Pixar films that followed used the 2006 Walt Disney Pictures logo.
  • This was the terminal Read-Forth version of the film to be narrated by Roy Dotrice.
  • This is Pixar'south first original film since A Bug's Life in 1998 and the first post-Disney buy Pixar picture show to be released in the summertime.
  • This is Pixar's first film to be a new independently produced movement picture with newer blitheness afterward Pixar was bought by Disney.
  • Remy, who is named "Trivial Chef", and the dish featured in the movie is besides featured in the video game Kingdom Hearts Iii.
  • In 2020, a TikTok user created a song in tribute to Remy, the film's main graphic symbol. Eventually, other TikTok users started remixing the song, equally well every bit choreography, gear up pattern, and new songs to create a full musical. Ratatouille the Musical was streamed on January 1, 2021.
  • The star rating depicted in the film is a bit of creative license. In France, restaurants are graded by the Michelin Guide, which uses a iii-star ranking. All the same, the American producers apparently decided that explaining that system would exist counterproductive for the story, and so used the more familiar five-star ranking best associated internationally with the quality grading of hotels. So, in reality, Gusteau's three-star ranking would have meant it was at the superlative tier of eating establishments.
  • With a runtime at 111 minutes Ratatouille is the 4th longest Pixar animated film after Incredibles 2 at 118 minutes, Cars at 117 minutes, and The Incredibles at 115 minutes.
  • This is the only Pixar Blu-ray to utilise a LPCM audio track.
  • The film was referenced in the critically acclaimed Television set series Breaking Bad, in the episode called "Fifty-One". The main grapheme, Walter White, mentions that his in-laws are watching Ratatouille, which also shares small-scale parallels to Breaking Bad.

External links

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Ratatouille logo.png

Media
Films: Ratatouille (video) • Your Friend the Rat

Music: Ratatouille (soundtrack)
Volume: Little Golden Book Disney's Wonderful World of Reading
Video Games: Ratatouille: The Video Game Ratatouille: Food Frenzy Kinect Rush: A Disney/Pixar Hazard The Fine art of Ratatouille Disney Emoji Blitz LEGO The Incredibles Disney Heroes: Battle Style Kingdom Hearts 3 Ratatouille the Musical

Disney Parks
Disney Blitheness BuildingGarden of the Twelve FriendsPixar Pal-A-RoundRemy's Ratatouille Adventure

Entertainment: Chef Remy & YouDisney'southward Showtime SpectacularFantasmic!Pixar Playtime Pals
Restaurants: Bistrot Chez RémyRemy'due south Patisserie
Shops: Chez Marianne: Souvenirs de Paris
Parade: Mickey's New year'due south Eve ParadePixar Play Parade
Firework: Disney Dreams!ILLUMINATE! A Nighttime CelebrationTogether Forever: A Pixar Nighttime SpectacularWonderful World of Blitheness

Characters
RemyEmileDjangoGitRat ColonyAuguste GusteauMabelAlfredo LinguiniChef SkinnerColette TatouLalo, Horst, Larousse, and PompidouMustafaTalon LabartheAnton EgoHealth InspectorAmbrister Minion
Locations
ParisGusteau'southLa RatatouilleEgo'south WorkroomMabel's Cottage
Songs
Le FestinProgramme B
Objects
RatatouilleAnyone Can CookA113Pizza Planet Truck
See Also
The Science Behind PixarPixar in a Box
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Disney1990.JPG

Walt Disney Blitheness Studios
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) • Pinocchio (1940) • Fantasia (1940) • Dumbo (1941) • Bambi (1942) • Saludos Amigos (1942) • The Three Caballeros (1944) • Make Mine Music (1946) • Fun and Fancy Free (1947) • Tune Time (1948) • The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949) • Cinderella (1950) • Alice in Wonderland (1951) • Peter Pan (1953) • Lady and the Tramp (1955) • Sleeping Dazzler (1959) • One Hundred and Ane Dalmatians (1961) • The Sword in the Stone (1963) • The Jungle Book (1967) • The Aristocats (1970) • Robin Hood (1973) • The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) • The Rescuers (1977) • The Fox and the Hound (1981) • The Black Cauldron (1985) • The Great Mouse Detective (1986) • Oliver & Visitor (1988) • The Little Mermaid (1989) • The Rescuers Down Under (1990) • Beauty and the Creature (1991) • Aladdin (1992) • The Lion King (1994) • Pocahontas (1995) • The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) • Hercules (1997) • Mulan (1998) • Tarzan (1999) • Fantasia 2000 (1999) • Dinosaur (2000) • The Emperor'southward New Groove (2000) • Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001) • Lilo & Stitch (2002) • Treasure Planet (2002) • Blood brother Acquit (2003) • Home on the Range (2004) • Chicken Little (2005) • Come across the Robinsons (2007) • Bolt (2008) • The Princess and the Frog (2009) • Tangled (2010) • Winnie the Pooh (2011) • Wreck-It Ralph (2012) · Frozen (2013) • Large Hero 6 (2014) • Zootopia (2016) • Moana (2016) • Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018) • Frozen II (2019) • Raya and the Last Dragon (2021) • Encanto (2021)

Upcoming: Strange Earth (2022)

Pixar
Toy Story (1995) • A Bug's Life (1998) • Toy Story two (1999) · Monsters, Inc. (2001) • Finding Nemo (2003) • The Incredibles (2004) • Cars (2006) • Ratatouille (2007) • WALL-E (2008) • Up (2009) • Toy Story 3 (2010) • Cars 2 (2011) • Brave (2012) • Monsters University (2013) • Inside Out (2015) • The Good Dinosaur (2015) • Finding Dory (2016) . Cars iii (2017) • Coco (2017) • Incredibles 2 (2018) • Toy Story four (2019) • Onward (2020) • Soul (2020) • Luca (2021) • Turning Red (2022)

Upcoming: Lightyear (2022) • Elemental (2023)

Disneytoon Studios
DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp (1990) • A Goofy Moving-picture show (1995) • The Tigger Pic (2000) · Peter Pan: Return to Never Land (2002) • The Jungle Book ii (2003) • Piglet'due south Big Movie (2003) Pooh'southward Heffalump Moving picture (2005) • Tinker Bell (2008) • Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure (2009) • Tinker Bong and the Great Fairy Rescue (2010) • Secret of the Wings (2012) • Planes (2013) • The Pirate Fairy (2014) • Planes: Burn down & Rescue (2014) • Tinker Bell and the Legend of the NeverBeast (2015)
Disney Television Blitheness
Doug's 1st Movie (1999) • Recess: Schoolhouse's Out (2001) • Teacher's Pet (2004)
ImageMovers Digital
A Christmas Carol (2009) • Mars Needs Moms (2011)
Films with Finish Movement Blitheness
The Nightmare Earlier Christmas (1993) • James and the Giant Peach (1996) • Frankenweenie (2012)
Alive-Activeness Films with Non-CG Animation
The Reluctant Dragon (1941) • Victory Through Air Power (1943) • Song of the South (1946) • So Dear to My Centre (1949) • Mary Poppins (1964) • Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971) • Pete'southward Dragon (1977) • Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) • The Lizzie McGuire Moving-picture show (2003) • Enchanted (2007) • Mary Poppins Returns (2018)

Source: https://disney.fandom.com/wiki/Ratatouille

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