The Movie and Television Review and Classification Board (MTRCB) savored the wonderful flavors of Disney/Pixar’s culinary-themed animated feature “Ratatouille,” giving it a “G” Rating which means “suitable for general audiences.”
Review Committee members Betty Molina, Alfred Yuson and Butch Bautista were unanimous in recommending “Ratatouille” for all ages. Their committee report reveals, “We recommend this movie for its MORAL VALUES and what it teaches and inspires by way of bringing down the barriers of discrimination, and espousing the principle that ANYONE and EVERYONE can and must rise beyond expected stereotypes.”
From Academy Award®-winning director Brad Bird and the amazing storytellers at Pixar Animation Studios comes “Ratatouille,” the most original comedy of the year about one of the most unlikely friendship’s imaginable. The film’s protagonist is a rat named Remy who dares to dream the impossible dream of becoming a gourmet chef in a five-star French restaurant. Together with a down-and-out garbage boy named Linguini, the pair carves their own imaginative path to becoming the greatest chef in Paris.
All his life, Remy, has had a gifted sense of smell and a most unusual dream for a rat: to cook in a gourmet restaurant. Undeterred by the obvious problem of trying to make it in the world’s most rodent-phobic profession, not to mention his family’s urgings to be satisfied with the usual trash-heap lifestyle, Remy’s fantasies are filled with flambés and sautés. But when circumstances literally drop Remy into the Parisian restaurant made famous by his culinary hero, Auguste Gusteau — whose mantra “anyone can cook” has been Remy’s life-long inspiration – he soon finds that being discovered in the kitchen can be alarmingly perilous if you’ve got whiskers and a tail.
Just as Remy’s dreams look like they will go up in smoke, he finds the one thing he needs, a friend to believe in him: the restaurant’s shy, outcast garbage boy who is about to be fired from his job. Now, with nothing left to lose, Remy and Linguini form the most improbable partnership – with Linguini’s clumsy body channeling Remy’s creative brains – that will turn Paris upside down, leading them both on an incredible journey of comical twists, emotional turns and the most unlikely of triumphs, which they could never have imagined without each other.
Opening across the Philippines on July 25, “Ratatouille” is distributed by Buena Vista International through Columbia Pictures.