City of Gold

City of Gold

By Laura Gabbert

  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release Date: 2016-03-11
  • Advisory Rating: R
  • Runtime: 1h 29min
  • Director: Laura Gabbert
  • Production Company: Nickelodeon Movies
  • Production Country: Australia, United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
6.659/10
6.659
From 1,644 Ratings

Description

In this richly penetrating documentary odyssey, Pulitzer Prize-winning food critic Jonathan Gold shows us a Los Angeles where ethnic cooking is a kaleidoscopic portal to the mysteries of an unwieldy city and the soul of America. Combing through colorful neighborhoods in his green pickup truck, Gold is sniffing out his next strip-mall discovery—whether Oaxacan grasshopper soup, hand-cut tonkotsu ramen, or a particularly unctuous pad see ew. As piping-hot platters are served up, so are stories of immigrants whose secret family recipes are like sacred offerings pledged for the opportunity to build their American Dream. With eternal curiosity, razor-sharp intellect, and existential longing, Gold is a culinary geographer taking us where no critic has gone before.

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Reviews

  • Pretentious

    1
    By filmfan4ever
    Not for food lovers nor real people. They act like they have authority to judge when they have no real credibility. No real substance. We’ve seen this film a hundred times in other/better docs anyway.
  • Gold is godfather of good eating!

    5
    By CannesUDigIt
    As a New Yorker I wasn't that familiar with Jonathan Gold until I saw this movie and it became readily apparent that he single handedly changed what we think fine dining really is all about. He is also responsible for the success of things like the Food Network, HGTV and reality show personalities like Anthonys (Bourdain and Zimmer) though he does it much much better. The film is also a great ethnographic study of how cities grow and diversify. Amazing film on so many levels.
  • so well done!

    5
    By KRCKRC
    We really enjoyed this movie, which is in equal parts a love letter to food, to Los Angeles, and to critical writing. I thought it might be boring or slow, but it was interesting and engaging throughout. I'll see LA with new eyes the next time I'm home to visit my parents. (And I'm going to try the restaurants around here that I've been walking past for years.)

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