The Menu
The Menu is a slick, well-crafted class satire that will make you laugh and make you uneasy, sometimes at the same time. It is also a film whose ideological message is more muddled than its admirers want to admit.
Full analysis belowMargin is positive (barely). Not a woke trap. The film's class warfare satire is front and center within the first fifteen minutes. There is no bait-and-switch. Conservative viewers will know exactly what they are dealing with well before the halfway point.
Our Verdict on The Menu
The Menu is a slick, well-crafted class satire that will make you laugh and make you uneasy, sometimes at the same time. It is also a film whose ideological message is more muddled than its admirers want to admit.
The setup is elegant. A group of wealthy diners travel to a remote island restaurant run by celebrity chef Julian Slowik (Ralph Fiennes, terrifying and still). Over the course of the evening, Slowik reveals that the menu has a purpose beyond food: each guest is there to be punished for what they represent. The film makes them all complicit in something. The food critic who destroyed careers with her reviews. The wealthy regulars who treated the restaurant as a symbol of their status. The tech bros who exploit other people's work. The faded movie star coasting on name recognition. And Tyler, the food obsessive who brought his date knowing she would die, because the experience was worth more to him than she was.
Only Margot (Anya Taylor-Joy) escapes, and the reason she escapes is the film's thesis statement. She orders a cheeseburger. Not because she is clever about it but because she is hungry and the food she has been served is, in her direct assessment, 'loveless.' Slowik finds joy in making it. A real thing, made with real care, for a real person. The pretension falls away. The artifice collapses. The cheeseburger saves her life.
There is something genuinely conservative in that message, and I mean that as a compliment. The film has contempt for the people who have elevated food (and by extension, art, culture, entertainment) into a status competition so abstract it has lost all connection to the thing itself. The food critic destroys chefs for sport. The foodie Tyler cannot taste anymore; he can only evaluate. The wealthy diners do not eat; they perform. The film is savagely funny about all of this, and its contempt feels earned rather than cheap.
But. The film also frames Slowik's rampage as a kind of labor uprising. He had his passion destroyed by the consumer class. His staff follow him into death with cultish devotion because he is the only person who ever saw them as skilled workers rather than service employees. The anti-capitalist reading is available, and the film does not work hard to prevent you from taking it.
This is what pushes the score to MIXED rather than TRADITIONAL LEAN. The film critiques both the consumer class and the artist class. It celebrates authenticity over pretension. But it also positions the service and creative worker as exploited victims of a rigged economic system. Both critiques are present and neither one fully wins.
Ralph Fiennes is extraordinary. He is genuinely frightening in a role that could easily tip into camp. Anya Taylor-Joy is the best she has been in a long time. The film is 107 minutes and does not waste a single one.
The question for conservative viewers is: can you enjoy a darkly funny film about wealthy people getting what they deserve, even if the economic framing occasionally tilts left? If the answer is yes, The Menu is one of the more sharply crafted genre films of 2022. If you need your entertainment to be ideologically tidy, look elsewhere.
Woke Tropes & Content Analysis
Formula: Weighted Score = Severity × Authenticity Multiplier × Centrality Multiplier
🔴 Woke Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class Warfare Anti-Capitalist Satire | 4 | 1 | 1.8 | 7.2 |
| Toxic Masculinity / Male Ego Critique | 2 | 0.7 | 1 | 1.4 |
| Sexual Harassment Addressed / Male Abuser Consequences | 2 | 0.7 | 0.5 | 0.7 |
| TOTAL WOKE | 9.3 | |||
🟢 Traditional Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Authenticity Over Pretension / Cheeseburger as Truth | 3 | 0.7 | 1.8 | 3.78 |
| Elite Cultural Class Savaged / Critics and Elites Punished | 3 | 0.7 | 1 | 2.1 |
| Common Sense / Working Class Pragmatism Rewarded | 3 | 0.7 | 1.8 | 3.78 |
| TOTAL TRADITIONAL | 9.7 | |||
Score Margin: +0.4 TRAD
Director: Mark Mylod
CENTER-LEFT. Primarily a television director known for Succession and Game of Thrones. His sensibility is satirical, dark, and class-conscious without being overtly political. He does not moralize; he observes and then burns things down.British director Mark Mylod built his reputation directing prestige television, most notably Succession (multiple Emmy awards) and Game of Thrones. The Menu is his most prominent theatrical feature. His background in Succession is evident throughout: the same razor-sharp class observation, the same black humor about wealthy people trapped in systems of their own making, the same preference for letting characters damn themselves rather than delivering moral lectures. Mylod is a craftsman first and an ideologue never. His instincts align more with social satire than political messaging. The film's visual control, tight 107-minute runtime, and willingness to withhold easy resolution all reflect his television background elevated to theatrical ambition.
Content Breakdown
Adult Viewer Insight
Conservative adults will find much to enjoy in The Menu's savaging of pretentious cultural elites. The film's core argument, that authenticity and directness defeat artifice every time, aligns with traditional values. The economic framing occasionally veers left. But Mylod is too sharp a director to let ideology overwhelm craft. Watch it for Fiennes and Taylor-Joy. Think about it for the cheeseburger.
Parental Guidance
Hard R. Adults only. Strong violence, disturbing content, sexual references. Not appropriate for children or teens.
Is The Menu Safe for Kids?
Rated R for strong language, graphic violence, and some sexual content. The Menu contains frequent profanity throughout, including multiple uses of strong language in both casual conversation and heated confrontations. Sexual content is moderate, consisting of brief references and some suggestive dialogue rather than explicit scenes. One character's bare back is visible during a non-sexual scene, but full nudity is not present. Violence is the most significant parental concern. The film features intense scenes of graphic violence that occur in a restaurant setting, including stabbings and other brutality. While not gratuitously prolonged, these moments are disturbing and may be genuinely unsettling for sensitive viewers. The overall tone balances dark comedy with genuine menace, which intensifies the impact of violent sequences. Alcohol consumption is frequent and contextual to the fine dining setting, depicted without glorification but as part of the characters' experience. Drug use is minimal. Spiritual references are largely absent, though the film does explore themes of control and judgment that carry philosophical weight. The film's black comedy horror tone means that even non-graphic moments carry psychological weight through atmosphere and implication. The material is designed to provoke discomfort alongside entertainment. Recommended for ages 17 and older. The combination of graphic violence, strong language, and unsettling psychological elements makes this inappropriate for younger teenagers, even those who enjoy horror films.
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