![]() In one image Hitchcock found a way to capture the delectable murderousness underlying carnivorousness – something Anthony Bourdain, a passionate cinephile whose show featured as shocking a death rate for members of the animal kingdom as any ever on TV, would have appreciated. I watched the film and damn near cried (because of the pizza scene, I swear). And that I did, even though I never made it to the famous L’Antica Pizzeria da Michele.Before an extended 2012 trip to Italy, in which I worked on organic farms throughout the southern region, I discovered that Julia Roberts visits L’Antica Pizzeria da Michele in “Eat Pray Love” (2010). ![]() ![]() Also, I wanted to eat some Neapolitan Margherita pizzas (check out this Anthony Bourdain clip). The primary goal: to visit my ancestors’ village outside the city within Campania. Hough Vague VisagesIn 2009, I scheduled a month-long backpacking trip to conclude in Naples, Italy. ![]() Richard Brody The New YorkerWhether the sumptuous feast or the modest pleasure, food is also a matter of money and need, and a primordially ingenious food movie displays culinary delight through the power-and the lack-of wealth, namely, Murnau’s “The Last Laugh,” from 1924, in a riotously ironic tag ending that both sets and breaks the template.
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