Download Ratatouille Full Movie

61
rate or flag this page

By lewisg

Download Ratatouille Full Movie


Download Ratatouille Full Movie

Welcome to the Ratatouille Hubpage. From here you can link onto an easy to use website where you can download the whole Ratatouille movie for free, or read on to find all you need to know about this great movie.

Read on for my favourite synopsis of this great movie:

In 'Ratatouille', a rat named Remy dreams of becoming a great chef despite his family's wishes and the obvious problem of being a rat in a decidedly rodent-phobic profession. When fate places Remy in the city of Paris, he finds himself ideally situated beneath a restaurant made famous by his culinary hero, Auguste Gusteau. Despite the apparent dangers of being an unwanted visitor in the kitchen at one of Paris' most exclusive restaurants, Remy forms an unlikely partnership with Linguini, the garbage boy, who inadvertently discovers Remy's amazing talents. They strike a deal, ultimately setting into motion a chain of events that turns the culinary world of Paris upside down.

Remy finds himself torn between following his dreams or returning forever to his previous existence as a rat. He learns the truth about friendship, family and having no choice but to be who he really is, a rat who wants to be a chef.

To start downloading link here now!


Favourite review of the Ratatouille movie

What a delicious concoction of French sophistication coupled with a dollop of slapstick humour and a sprinkling of visual marvel. Pixar's "Ratatouille" is the perfect recipe for an adult/child offering containing intelligent verbal sparing as well as delightful animal cuteness. You don't have to have a kid to see and enjoy this latest by writer/director Brad Bird ("The Incredibles").

I confess that for the past few months my 6-year-old daughter and I went searching for "Ratatouille" trailers on the internet, that's how charming the story seemed. And it most definitely is. This tale of a very smart rat named Remy (voiced by Patton Oswalt) who dreams of being a chef in the very human world of French haute cuisine, is as endearing as it gets. Enamoured with the works of late legendary chef Auguste Gusteau (Brad Garrett), Remy drives his brother (Peter Sohn) and father (Brian Dennehy) batty with his gourmet recipes, which he creates from the scraps of the country home they're nested in. One day, however, they're discovered and forced to flee through the sewers. Separated from the others, Remy finds himself in Paris in front of Auguste's restaurant accompanied by what he believes is the chef's ghost (or perhaps a figment of his imagination).

I love seeing humans depicted in animated features, and Pixar knows perfectly how to design them. Take the motley crew of kitchen workers in Auguste's restaurant, all with their unique quirks and temperaments. There's evil head chef Skinner (Ian Holm) whose plans for the restaurant following Auguste's death are questionable; and feisty Colette (Janeane Garofalo), the only female in a male-dominated business. But it's our unlikely hero, Linguini (Lou Romano) who elicits the laughs. The shy garbage boy finds himself the centre of attention after Remy spices up the soup, and he gets credited for it. Now he not only has to repeat the feat, but come up with other recipes as well.

One of the funniest sequences is when both Linguini and Remy realize they understand each other, though not verbally. The only way, then, for the rat to help Linguini with the cooking is to hide under his chef's hat and manipulate his hair. The creation of gourmet dishes is palpable and inventive, with those of us in the audience licking our lips in anticipation. Of course there are pratfalls and plenty of near accidents, especially when very powerful food critic Anton Ego (Peter O'Toole) is in the dining room.

Thematically there's plenty going on in "Ratatouille," with issues of belonging and finding personal fulfillment taking centre stage. Behind the comedy Remy feels alienated by his rat community, but obviously can't survive in the human world. As to Linguini, though he finds love in Colette, he too searches for acceptance, but is unable to move beyond the lies. Yet despite the abundant dialogue, the film never feels bloated.

"Ratatouille" is by far the best Pixar picture to date. Watch for the preceding short, "Lifted", about a driving lesson aboard a UFO. Hilarious

Anglea Baldassarre - Sympatico CA

Print   —   Rate it:  up  down  flag this hub

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

lewisg  says:
2 years ago

Link onto the link 'link onto an easy to use website' phrase within the first paragraph of this hubpage and that will take you to the necessary programe where you can begin downloading.

Joseph  says:
10 months ago

nice movie. I want to download it

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working