How To Beat The 6 KILLER COURSES In "The Menu"

3,807,710
6,937
Published 2023-01-25

All Comments (21)
  • @james117bond3
    I feel like pretty much all of us would survive this from not being able to even afford going to a place like this.
  • @deCervantes
    His analysis is literally just "me personally, I would've simply known what was gonna happen"
  • The ending is like a reverse Ratatouille: instead of a food critic re-discovering his love for eating, a chef re-discovers his love for cooking
  • The developers literally said "let's make a horror/thriller movie about Gordon Ramsay." Now we just need one about Guy Fieri.
  • @watzwatz4154
    I liked how the majority of the movie it seemed like Tyler was the biggest idiot of the group and the only one who didn't seem to catch the hints, until it got revealed that he was the only one that actually understood what was going on. He wasn't naive, he just really loved it.
  • I think "order the cheeseburger" is both the smartest, and most delicious, decision to deescalate any situation.
  • @RageCreati0n
    I believe at the end of the day, Slowik just wanted someone to enjoy and just appreciate his work. Without fangirling over it, without dissecting and criticizing every little aspect. He was begging up until the end for some one to just say, “thank you, I really liked it.” And that’s why Margot got to leave.
  • I love these channels because it's like watching a kid explain to you how they would totally beat the bad guy from their favorite movie. You totally wouldn't do that but your enthusiasm is lovely!
  • The investor being slowly lowered into the water like a teabag while the guests are served tea is poetic.
  • Damn, Hell's Kitchen's gone off the deep end since I've last watched.
  • @mushmello526
    That cheeseburger scene is like one of the most well written scenes in a long time. Not much dialog, just a cheeseburger and a man reliving his youth for the last time. It's perfect. Like the Cheeseburger
  • @jakeblack3614
    The restaurant has been open for a long time and there’s never been any issues. This was the first time the chef decided to do bad stuff. There’s no way they could have expected this before hand since everyone knows that it’s a really nice restaurant. Some of the guests have even been multiple times.
  • @Fickleberry
    The saddest moment, is when Erin/Margot looks back and the lady whose husband she slept with sees her hesitate and encourages her to leave them there. The was a bit of selflessness that isn't acknowledged.
  • I think when she ordered a cheeseburger it was initially to buy some time, vaguely hoping Slowik's history would help her somehow. By doing so, she interrupted the menu from being served, and when the chef played along, she knew she had seized control of his scenario where it mattered. She had created a kayfabe for both of them, and if she played her part well, he wouldn't - couldn't - force her to play by his scenario. Because her newly created story should finish with the customer departing while carrying the takeout bag to finish eating the cheeseburger elsewhere.
  • The Menue tells you exactly how to beat it. That's kind of the point of the movie. She made him enjoy cooking again by asking him to make the thing she saw he mad in a picture of him smiling from him true living space...the simplicity of it is kind of poetic, instead of infuriating like many movies with painfully simple plot twists.
  • @podor9756
    Fun fact: The characters in a horror movie don’t know they’re in a horror movie. That might seem obvious, but it’s apparently something you can’t comprehend
  • @thefloralpunk
    I love the dynamic between the Head Chef and "Margot." They played off each other well, and she actually got to the heart of his insanity. Not working against it, but with it. And she got the best meal of her life from it. Cheeseburgers are the best.
  • @jq1875
    I liked how Margot didn't give up and accept her fate. She was the only guest who kept fighting back both mentally, emotionally, and physically till the end.
  • @KitKatNisa
    I love that his "solutions" almost always rely on just flat out knowing what's going to happen. Yes, obviously if you have magic knowledge of everything that occurs, you'd be fine.