No Need For Reservations
- Title: No Reservations
- IMDb: link

It’s the recipes you create yourself that are the best.”
Kate (Catherine Zeta-Jones) is the head chef at an upscale New York restaurant. She’s also compulsive, anal, controlling, and a times what could be referred to as a bitch on wheels. All this changes when her sister dies in a car accident leaving her young daughter Zoe (Abigail Breslin) in Kate’s care. To make matters worse the owner of the restaurant (Patricia Clarkson) has hired a new chef (Aaron Eckhart) to spice things up and pick-up the slack in the kitchen as Kate deals with her grief and new responsibilities. You can guess where the story goes from here. Kate learns to be more open and accepting, Zoe struggles with her mother’s death and new surroundings, and the animosity between Kate and Nick turns into love just as movie romances always seem to do.
No Reservations isn’t a bad film, but it’s so predictable and tame that it more resembles a frozen dinner than cuisine. If not for the fact of casting three remarkably talented and likable leads the film would be almost completely unwatchable. Though the star power isn’t enough to turn this turkey into a swan it does enough to make the film at least palatable.
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I’ve been reading the Harry Potter series for just over nine years now. I’ve spent countless hours reading and rereading the books, discussing them with my friends, and even protesting a radio station for ruining the last book’s ending on-air before I finished it. With all of my history with the books, is it even close to possible for series author J.K. Rowling to end this story that I’ve grown up with to my satisfaction?