A story’s opening scene often contains the DNA for the entire narrative that follows. In The Kitchen Brigade, that scene is a beautifully specific conflict over a beet dish. The sous chef, Cathy Marie, a culinary purist of fearsome intensity, argues for hibiscus. Her celebrity boss, a man more interested in brand than brilliance, demands balsamic. It is an argument about taste, but it is also an argument about control, vision, and integrity.
When Cathy walks out, she is not just quitting a job; she is rejecting a system she can no longer command. This potent setup establishes her character with sharp efficiency. She is a master of her craft who is fundamentally unmanageable. Her subsequent failure to find another position in the world of haute cuisine is a direct consequence of this trait.
Her eventual, reluctant acceptance of a job as a cook in a hostel for young migrants is therefore not just a change of scenery. It is a narrative exile, a stripping away of the context that gave her skills meaning. The film places its highly specialized protagonist into a world with a completely different value system, asking a fundamental storytelling question: what is a brilliant chef to do in a place where the primary goal is simply to be fed?
The Canteen and the Cannon
Audrey Lamy’s portrayal of Cathy is one of precise, contained fury. She enters the drab hostel canteen not as an employee but as an occupying force, a cannon rolled into a quiet town. Her posture is ramrod straight, her gaze sweeps over the humble kitchen with unconcealed disdain, and her first interactions are clipped commands rather than conversations.
The screenplay gestures toward a shared history of institutional life—Cathy, too, grew up in the care system—but this detail feels more like a convenient justification for her eventual empathy than a deeply felt aspect of her character. It is a box ticked for motivation, but the film is less interested in her past wounds than in her present abrasiveness. The hostel itself is rendered as a space of weary functionality, a backdrop of peeling paint and bureaucratic apathy.
Its humanity is embodied by two key figures: Lorenzo, the director whose exhaustion is palpable in every sigh, and Sabine, the teacher whose gentle persistence acts as the first subtle force to soften Cathy’s armor. The central conflict is established immediately and effectively. Cathy’s perfectionism is an alien concept here.
She is a culinary artist in a world of canned ravioli, and her initial attempts to impose the logic of a high-end kitchen are met with the blunt reality of her new role. The idea to train the boys is not her own, a crucial detail that positions her firmly as a reluctant protagonist, pushed toward her own redemption arc by the suggestion of others.
A Recipe for a New Life
The film’s narrative engine truly ignites once Cathy begins to assemble her kitchen team. The story shifts into the familiar, satisfying structure of an underdog training narrative. Cathy imposes the rigid, militaristic French “brigade” system, transforming the chaotic energy of the young men into a disciplined unit.
This choice is telling; she recreates the only kind of system she trusts, one of absolute control and clear hierarchy. The montages of knife skills and sauce preparation are the heart of the movie, showing the boys’ journey from clumsy novices to a capable crew. The script uses this process as its central metaphor. Learning the precise language of French cuisine—a perfect consommé, a foundational sauce—becomes a stand-in for learning the rules of French society. It is presented as a tangible skill that can offer them stability in lives defined by uncertainty.
This is an effective storytelling device, though it comes at a cost. The young men themselves remain a charming but largely undifferentiated group. The actors bring a vibrant energy, but the script denies them true interiority. Their complex and traumatic backstories are consolidated into a single poignant montage, a narrative efficiency that keeps the emotional focus squarely on their mentor. They are the object of her transformation, the problem for her to solve, which prevents the film from becoming a true ensemble piece.
Social Commentary, Lightly Seasoned
In its final act, the film’s narrative choices reveal its ultimate priorities. The story is constructed as a classic “white-savior” narrative, where every plot development serves the protagonist’s arc from selfish artist to selfless protector. The success of the young men is consistently framed as a reflection of her success; their potential future is her ultimate professional accomplishment.
This structure is thrown into high relief with the introduction of a televised cooking competition, a sort of narrative deus ex machina for the modern age. The competition provides a cinematic, high-stakes solution to the intractable, real-world problem of immigration law. It is a device that feels tonally jarring, shifting the focus from the grim realities of the legal system to the artificial drama of reality TV. The resolution, while emotionally satisfying on a surface level, feels hollow.
By tying the fates of these young men to a contest victory, the film neatly sidesteps any meaningful engagement with the bureaucratic machinery they are truly up against. It is the trade-off many crowd-pleasers make: exchanging complex truth for a simple, uplifting feeling. The Kitchen Brigade is a competently made film with strong lead performances, but its narrative architecture is built on a foundation of familiar tropes that limit its ability to say something truly substantive.
The Kitchen Brigade (original title La Brigade) is a 2022 French comedy-drama film directed by Louis-Julien Petit. The film premiered at the L’Alpe d’Huez Film Festival and had its French theatrical release on March 23, 2022. It was released in the United States on January 13, 2023, distributed by Samuel Goldwyn Films, and may be available to stream or rent on various digital platforms depending on your region.
Full Credits
Director: Louis-Julien Petit
Writers: Louis-Julien Petit, Liza Benguigui, Sophie Bensadoun, Thomas Pujol
Producers and Executive Producers: Liza Benguigui, Odyssée Pictures, Apollo Films, France 3 Cinéma, Elemiah, Pictanovo, Charlie Films
Cast: Audrey Lamy, François Cluzet, Chantal Neuwirth, Fatou Kaba, Yannick Kalombo, Amadou Bah, Mamadou Koita, Alpha Barry, Yadaf Awel, Demba Guiro, Boubacare Balde, Irakli Maisaia, Mohamat Hamit Moussa, Sayed Farid Hossini, Saikat Barua, Amadi Diallo, Aiham Deeb, Stephane Brel, Chloé Astor, Christophe Aironi
Director of Photography (Cinematographer): David Chambille
Editors: Nathan Delannoy, Antoine Vareille
Composer: Laurent Perez Del Mar
The Review
The Kitchen Brigade
The Kitchen Brigade is a well-crafted and charming crowd-pleaser that follows a predictable narrative recipe to the letter. Audrey Lamy's sharp performance as a difficult chef gives the film flavor, but the story relies on a familiar white-savior trope and a contrived third-act competition to solve complex social issues. It's a heartwarming, if slightly undercooked, story that chooses feel-good simplicity over meaningful substance, making for a pleasant but ultimately forgettable dish.
PROS
- Strong lead performance by Audrey Lamy.
- Engaging and charismatic ensemble cast of young actors.
- Effectively follows a satisfying and heartwarming underdog formula.
- Competent filmmaking with a pleasant, accessible tone.
CONS
- Relies on a predictable and problematic "white-savior" narrative.
- The young migrant characters are underdeveloped and serve the protagonist's arc.
- Offers a simplistic and rushed solution to complex social issues.
- The third-act shift to a TV competition feels tonally jarring and contrived.























































