Toast (film)

Toast (2010 film)
Directed by S. J. Clarkson
Produced by Nicole Finnan
Alison Owen
Eugenio Pérez
Paul Trijbits
Faye Ward
Written by Lee Hall
Starring Helena Bonham Carter
Freddie Highmore
Ken Stott
Oscar Kennedy
Frasier Huckle
Sarah Middleton
Victoria Hamilton
Corrinne Wicks
Music by Matt Biffa
Cinematography Balazs Bolygo
Edited by Liana Del Giudice
Production
company
K5 International
Ruby Film and Television
BBC Films
Screen WM
Distributed by W2 Media
Release dates
  • 30 December 2010 (2010-12-30)

(BBC One/HD)
11 August 2011 (theatrical)

Country United Kingdom
Language English

Toast (2010), a BBC One adaptation broadcast on 30 December 2010 and directed by S. J. Clarkson, is based on the autobiographical novel of the same name by the cookery writer Nigel Slater. The cast includes Freddie Highmore, Helena Bonham Carter, Ken Stott and Oscar Kennedy.[1] The film received a gala at the 2011 Berlin Film Festival.[2][3] It was released in cinemas on 11 August 2011.[4]

Plot

The Slaters of Wolverhampton are plagued with Mrs. Slater's (Victoria Hamilton) chronic debilitating asthma and her cooking limited to what comes in canned goods that she can heat in boiling water. Mr. Alan Slater (Ken Stott) is sick with worry and has a cantankerous personality. Nigel longs for a life that is more than a succession of canned-food dinners made from what can be heated in boiling water. When dinner is burned, the standard substitute of toast is always served. He loves toast, with the crunchy outside giving way to buttery softness inside. Despite her infrequent forays into cooking meals from scratch, his mother's attempts to improve her cooking change nothing before or after her death. His father continues in widowhood with the same cooking style and frequent dinners of toast. The experience brings Nigel to conclude that he is not liked. Nigel learns from a friend that the way in which he could attempt a better relationship with his father is to cook a meal for him.

His cooking efforts are thwarted by the new housekeeper, the married and "common" Mrs. Joan Potter (Helena Bonham Carter), who seduces Alan with her apple pie and array of gourmet meals. The two start to spend time together at one point she exiting her council house through an upstairs window so as not to be found out by her husband. Without announcement, the Slaters make move to the Herefordshire countryside along with the Mrs. Potter. Nigel co-exists with her but never accepts her. She makes a competition of cooking when the teenaged Nigel's shows an emerging interest in developing his skills at school home economics class cookery lessons. Mrs. Potter's lemon meringue pie becomes Nigel's quest to learn the secret recipe.

Alan's cantankerous nature returns with the endless eating that must be done with Mrs. Potter's excessive cooking although he intends to marry her. The second Mrs. Slater makes every attempt to thwart Nigel's efforts at cooking by having him quit a Saturday job at a pub restaurant. His departing employment is not without benefit when a friendly walk with the pub owner's son, training at ballet school, stirs Nigel's sexual awareness with a kiss and encouragement to take a chance at the world despite being on his own.

Nigel finds his father has died while he was at the pub, resolves to make off for London and bewilders the Mrs. Potter when he declares that she has won and he wants her out of his life. At The Savoy Hotel, he is interviewed for a kitchen job by a toast snacking chef (Nigel Slater) and hired much to his disbelief. Nigel is reassured by the chief that he will make it, has him put on a chef's jacket embroidered with "Savoy London" and Nigel cracks a smile.

Cast

Actor Role Remarks
Helena Bonham Carter Joan Potter
Freddie Highmore Nigel Slater, teen
Ken Stott Dad
Oscar Kennedy Nigel Slater, child His acting debut.[5]
Frasier Huckle Warrel
Victoria Hamilton Mum
Matthew McNulty Josh
Clare Higgins Mavis
Ben Aldridge Stuart
Selina Cadell Ruby
Sarah Middleton Beany
Kia Pegg Primary School Girl
Corrinne Wicks Secondary school teacher
Nigel Slater Chef

Production

The chief filming location was in Birmingham and Worcestershire with the Black Country Living Museum transformed into 1960's Wolverhampton. Principal sets were constructed in a disused bank on Broad St. The only inclement weather encountered during filming was at Penarth which resulted in script changes to reflect the cold wet conditions. Filming lasted from 21 June to 24 July 2010.[6]

Criticism

Slater's stepsisters Ann and June Perrens have criticised Toast, stating that their mother, Dorothy Perrens – renamed "Mrs. Potter" in the film – had been falsely portrayed as a seductive cleaner who frequently used foul language.("I really cannot believe that I pay my licence fee only to have them portray my dear mother as a tart"), and Slater's father, Tony – renamed "Alan" – was also represented in a negative light ("He was a lovely man, an absolute perfect gentleman. He was kind and caring, everyone said it"), although they admit that Tony was not particularly fond of his son. They also claim that while Perrens was indeed a good cook, she never actually served lemon meringue pie, and their stepfather had died of chest pain as a result of a strenuous game of tennis, as opposed to their mother's deliberate overfeeding as portrayed in Toast. Slater has refused to comment.[7]

References

  1. BBC (12 June 2010). "Toast". BBC1. Archived from the original on 25 June 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  2. "'The King's Speech,' 'Toast,' 'Sacrifice' Get Galas in Berlin". Hollywood Reporter. Hollywood Reporter. 21 January 2011. Retrieved 13 March 2011.
  3. "Toast at the Berlin Film Festival". Berlin Film Festival. Berlin Film Festival. Retrieved 13 March 2011.
  4. "Toast (2010) – IMDb". Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  5. BBC (12 June 2010). "Toast". BBC1. Archived from the original on 25 June 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  6. "Helena Bonham Carter to film new movie Toast in Birmingham and Black Country". Birmingham Post. 23 June 2010. Archived from the original on 2 January 2011. Retrieved 2 January 2011.
  7. Nigel Slater's cooked up a load of cruel lies about our mother, say the food writer's stepsisters after watching BBC dramatisation of his childhood
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