They felt better about “their lot in life” having eaten and had a caring person reach out to them. In this act of giving candy (Communion) people spent a moment to reflect on their own lives more in depth. The candy lady reached out to hurting people and tried to give them the candy that was best for each of them. I found in “Chocolat” a flashback to the Christ figure who was available to people where they were in life. In his review he mentioned the word “parable” and this triggered for me the many years old film made for the New York World Fair called “The Parable.” I have just returned from the film, “Chocolat” and decided to read the comments by Ron Salfen after seeing the film. The question is, “Now that they are in charge of setting the tempo for the community, how will they lead?” And exactly where will they find that they have to reconstruct a moral code that they so assiduously and gleefully eroded? The question is not whether their way would be more fun for everyone. “Chocolat” is about the good guys - the good-looking, reasonable, fun-loving, kindly folks - overthrowing a regime which was haughty, overbearing, imperious, controlling and ignorant. Is this the best way to nurture God’s people? But is our culture better off, now that the church’s influence has waned, without any agreed-upon values? If everyone decides what is right for them as individuals, then there is no longer any sense of what is wrong or right for the community as a whole. It’s easy to criticize church people as uptight, narrow-minded, hypocritical kill-joys. But how has the lack of societal stricture or censure contributed to the current reality of millions of “illegitimate” children? Is that what’s good for the nurture of children? But how then does society control the freedom to divorce from becoming an alarming 50 percent divorce rate?Ĭhildren who are born out of wedlock ought not be ridiculed for something that is not their fault. It’s easy to argue that an abused woman ought to be able to escape her marriage vows (especially after the abusing husband is painfully demonstrated to be unrehabilitated). Is churchgoing then no longer considered valuable? What about the church? The Bible? The institution of marriage? That sounds like freedom, but it also raises the question of whether there ought to be any standards at all. Don’t set standards to which everyone must conform. The moral of “Chocolat,” of course, is the current epitome of Hollywood political correctness: Let people do what they want and be who they are, as long as they aren’t hurting anybody. And we all know that it’s going to turn out like “Pleasantville,” where everything that was in black and white eventually was in vivid color because people were allowed to let loose their natural desires. His sermons are even edited for him! And the church is used as a vehicle to denounce the new “immorality” of people who only want to introduce to these hard-working villagers the simple pleasures of eating well, dancing with abandon and accepting people who are not like them. The church gets involved in this because the very young priest, who is found singing “You Ain’t Nothin’ but a Hound Dog” while weeding the church lawn, is leaned upon by the crusty mayor to castigate this new hedonism. ![]() And their leader (Johnny Depp) takes an interest in the bright and cheerful and pretty proprietress. ![]() A lonely old man finds a safe place where he can court a friendly widow, who’s been grieving for her husband who was killed in the late war - not the Second, but the First World War.Īnd the “river rats,” who appear on the edge of town like Gypsies, discover that the Chocolate Shop is also the only place in town where they are welcome. The old widow who has rented them the place (Judi Dench) is irascible, mainly because her daughter won’t let her see her grandson because the widow is a “bad influence.” But they can drink chocolate together at the shop while his mother is getting her hair done.Ī frightened villager whose husband abuses her (Lena Olin) finds more than a refuge she discovers that she can be considered useful and helpful to another. And the whole town acts as if she had leprosy.īut there are some cracks in the armor of the buttoned-up bastion of self-discipline. They are told to avoid the sinful enticements of this vagabond woman with her bastard child. ![]() The poor residents act like they’ve never seen a piece of candy in their lives. She opens a chocolate store, just as Lent is beginning. He’s like a fussy old Puritan, insisting that everything be decent and orderly, and scared to death that someone, somewhere, might be having fun.Įnter Juliette Binochet, and her daughter, blown in by the North Wind.
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