When we first meet young Remy (well-voiced by comedian Patton Oswalt), his exceptional olfactory gifts have reduced him to serving as "poison sniffer" for his father (Brian Dennehy), brother and the other garbage-foraging members of their colony. But Remy, who refuses to walk on his front paws for fear of dirtying them, prefers to raid the "good stuff" in the kitchen of the elderly Parisian widow whose attic provides the colony with its latest home. Letting his nose guide him, he combines fresh fruits, cheeses and spices in an array of exotic combinations. And when he bites into some new flavor, he experiences a kind of synesthesia, "seeing" the taste represented as a series of shapes and colors. Then, opportunity strikes in the form of forced eviction — "Raid!" — separating Remy from his family and landing him on the doorstep of Gusteau's, the flagship restaurant of Remy's favorite chef, now reduced to a glorified tourist attraction following the death of its owner and the removal of one of its five stars by the influential food critic Anton Ego (Peter O'Toole).
As luck would have it, Remy's arrival coincides with that of Linguini (Lou Romano), the bumbling, stringbean-thin son of Gusteau's former girlfriend, who comes looking for work and is promptly assigned to garbage duty by the kitchen staff's resident dictator, Skinner (Ian Holm). Linguini, too, has dreams of cooking up a storm, though his efforts in that direction prove ill-fit even for rodent consumption. But with a little help from a certain four-legged intruder — who can't verbally communicate with Linguini but can control the movement of his limbs through the carefully orchestrated yanking of the curls on his head...voilà! — from trash heap to magnifique!
As has been widely reported, the Pixar-produced Ratatouille was begun by another director, yet the film is unmistakably Bird's own, not least in its focus on the disparity between art and commerce, and between those lives confined to ordinariness and those meant for Olympian heights. (Not for nothing does the movie have Skinner plotting to plaster Gusteau's mug all over a brand of TV dinners.) But the most provocative gesture of Ratatouille is surely its vivid exultation in the pleasures of haute cuisine. It's a slow-food movie for a fast-food nation, being distributed by a company known for its McDonald's marketing tie-ins.
But fret not, parents: This isn't one of those hipster family films that sails over the heads of its intended audience. It's as much a feast for the senses as it is food for thought, from the dazzling photo-realism of its creatures to the impressionistic views of the City of Lights. And, oh, the dinners — delectable plates of soups and sweetbreads and, of course, the titular stew, rendered with the help of such real-life celebrity chefs as Thomas Keller and Jean-Claude Vrinat. In today's DIY culture, anyone can direct, but only Brad Bird could have made Ratatouille.