17 November 2020

Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe (Mary Stuart Masterson)

We wanted something reasonably light-weight to watch, and it had been nearly nine years since we saw ‘Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle-Stop Cafe’. We recalled liking it, but not much more, although I had, in the intervening years, read the book by Fannie Flagg on which the film was based.


It’s a dual-timeline story, set in Alabama in the Southern part of the United States. That meant that the accents were sometimes quite difficult to understand - but I got the general gist, and gradually attuned to the voices as the film progressed.


Evelyn Couch (Kathy Bates) is the character we meet first - she’s a middle-aged, overweight woman who eats compulsively, and is feeling rather unfulfilled in her marriage to the even more overweight Ed (Gailard Sartain). So she takes various classes in spicing up her marriage, or assertiveness - there’s some mild humour in these, but they’re not very successful. 


Evelyn and Ed regularly visit one of his aunts at a nursing home, but the aunt is bad-tempered and doesn’t want to see Eveyln. So she sits in the waiting room, and is approached by the elderly Ninny Threadgoode (brilliantly played by Jessica Tandy). Ninny wants to talk, and Evelyn is an eager listener.  So, over the course of several visits, the story is told.


It’s done with flashback scenes to the 1930s, and although we don’t see Ninny as a child - she married into the family - we meet Idgie (Mary Stuart Masterson), her youngest sister-in-law, who grew up as something of a rebel. She’s honest and likeable, but did everything to shock her parents and their pastor. She’s a strong character who carries a lot of anger, possibly due to a tragic accident which we see early in the film. 


Ninny’s story starts by telling Evelyn that Idgie was arrested for the murder of Frank Bennett.  But then she jumps back to Idgie’s childhood and teenage years, and how she and her friend Ruth started running a cafe which specialised in fried green tomatoes; apparently this is a traditional and much-loved Southern dish.  


There are many important issues covered in this film, one of the significant ones being the treatment of black people in the 1930s. Idgie and her family are not at all racist, but they do have black workers and servants, though they treat them as friends, and Idgie stands up for them at risk to herself, at times. The attitudes of some other white people, including a sheriff from another county, are horrendous, however.


There are also insights into a a very abusive marriage, and hints of a lesbian relationship, although it’s so lightly touched upon that it would be easy to miss. And through it all, Idgie’s assertive, strong actions, as described by Ninny, are an inspiration to Evelyn.  


The rating is 12 (PG-13 in the US), which I think is about right. It’s a good story, but there’s some bad language, and some violence, albeit mostly off-screen. There are some traumatic scenes, and some very unpleasant implications, too, which I’m trying not to think about even now. But there’s also some gentle humour, and a great deal of warmth in the characters, particularly in the growing friendship between the elderly Ninny and Evelyn. 


All in all, we were quite engrossed for the two hours of this film, and liked it very much indeed.  Definitely recommended.


Review copyright 2020 Sue's DVD Reviews

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