La Cocina

La Cocina(2024)

R
10/25/2024 (US)Drama, Comedy2h 19m
7.0

"Get back to work."

Overview

In the sweltering back kitchen of a Times Square restaurant, undocumented cook Pedro is caught between mounting pressures at work and a complicated romance with waitress Julia. When money goes missing, suspicion spreads, igniting tensions that threaten to upend the fragile hopes of the staff.

Alonso Ruizpalacios

Screenplay

Alonso Ruizpalacios

Director

Arnold Wesker

Story

Where to Watch

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Media

Official Streaming Trailer

Official Streaming Trailer

Trailer

Official Trailer #2

Official Trailer #2

Trailer

Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Trailer

UK Trailer #2

UK Trailer #2

Teaser

La Cocina on the Red Carpet

La Cocina on the Red Carpet

Featurette

Interview with Director Alonso Ruizpalacios

Interview with Director Alonso Ruizpalacios

Featurette

AFI Fest conversation: LA COCINA

AFI Fest conversation: LA COCINA

Featurette

First Look

First Look

Clip

Social

C
A review by CinemaSerf
6.0

Written on March 29, 2025

If you saw “Boiling Point” (2021) then you’ll get the gist of this drama set in an hectic New York restaurant kitchen. “The Grill” might look peaceful to the customers, but it’s kitchen is a multi-cultural, multi-lingual and attitudinal melting pot of cooks, waitresses and cleaners under the guidance of a no-nonsense chef (Lee Sellars) and a slimy manager “Luis” (Eduardo Olmos). It’s this latter man who finds there’s a problem one morning when his boss reports that $800-odd is missing from one of the cash registers and the owner “Rashid” (Oded Fehr) is seeing red. Using the investigation as a pretext, we quickly discover that this room is full of characters who generally rub along ok with each other, except for “Pedro” (Raul Briones) and “Max” (Spenser Granese), with the latter man frequently and violently fed up with the lack of English being spoken in this kitchen of Babel. Meantime, “Pedro” is trying to rekindle his relationship with waitress “Julia” (Rooney Mara) who is expecting, but not intending to have, his baby. With everyone working flat out, the search for the missing cash and the prevailing, accumulating, sense of toxicity amidst this atmosphere, the scene is set for quite a lively look at the trade, it’s traditions and the vulnerability of so many workers with a dubious legal status who are treated little better than slaves. Sadly, though, for me the film just didn’t take off. Aside from the fact that there is simply far too much dialogue, it is much too long and the characterisations are way too shallow and under-developed. The acting isn’t especially engaging, and the writing doesn’t do enough to create anyone here that is liable enough to feel the remotest sympathy for. There are too many repetitious angry confrontations without enough humour to entertain or sustain much interest and as they quite literally wade through the story, it just runs out of steam before bordering on the farcical at the end. It’s disappointing, sorry.