What is Ratatouille the movie about?

Among the ever–expanding Hollywood canon of films about food, the best one will forever be Pixar’s Ratatouille.

The film follows a rat named Remy who dreams of being a chef. After being separated from his disapproving family, he ends up in the restaurant of his cooking inspiration, Chef Gusteau. Through a series of hijinks, Remy ends up helping a garbage boy named Alfredo Linguini rise to Head Chef by hiding in his chef’s toque and cooking amazing meals.

Though some of the animation looks a bit clunky 13 years later, the characters’ expressions are still emotive and stunning. The food is beautifully animated and inspires genuine hunger. I still dream of eating a ratatouille that looks as good as the titular dish of the film. The film made everything from a cube of cheese from the trash to snooty French cuisine appeal to the whimsy of childhood.



The lessons Ratatouille teaches about food are simple yet profound, and probably the first time the film’s younger demographic had been asked to contemplate what they eat.

“Good food is like music you can taste, color you can smell…You need only be aware to stop and savor it,” Gusteau remarks as Remy watches him on television.

Forget when we were easily distractible children; how many of us think about what we’re eating now? How many of us take time out of our daily schedules to meditate on and savor our meals?

Ratatouille sees food and cooking as art, and it sees art as a process that requires courage above all else. The film continually speaks to the courage it takes to thrive instead of just skating by and surviving. Remy always has the ability to eat food from the garbage and survive like the rest of his family, but he yearns for more. What he loves best about humans—both before he meets any and even after he sees evidence of how they kill his kind—is that they discover and create. What a wonderful way to see what it is to be human, the power of creation we usually ascribe to divinity.

Courage is a common message in children’s movies, but Ratatouille is unique in that it espouses the courage to create, to be selfish about your ambition and passions. Early on in the film, Remy chooses to fix a pot of soup in the restaurant instead of leaving the incredibly dangerous kitchen. Maybe it’s just a plot device—or maybe it’s about the desire and ambition to prove oneself, to innovate. The tagline of the film is even “He’s dying to be a chef!", and despite its comical intention, it speaks to the desperation we feel to fulfill our dreams.



“Anyone can cook, but only the fearless can be great,” Gusteau says as Remy yet again watches him on television.

The antagonist of the film, food critic Anton Ego, mocks that philosophy until he eats Remy’s ratatouille. He’s an iconic villain, with his skeletal appearance, coffin–shaped office, and delight in ruining restaurants' reputations.

Ego eventually learns that truly anyone can cook, even a rat. As he eats the ratatouille, he launches into the memory of his mother’s cooking, of her wiping his tears after a bad fall from his bike. It's a memory of comfort and safety; Ego cleans his plate. He is reminded, and thus reminds the audience, that art is about being open to the new, to potential failures and overlooked ideas. Anything someone creates out of love, putting themselves out in the world, is more meaningful and valuable than any critique.

“The world is often unkind to new talent, new creations. The new needs friends,” he says, referring to the food and art and all that we set out to do.

Even with the success of impressing Ego, Ratatouille doesn’t shy away from themes of failure and moving forward. Most of the conflicts in the film are resolved fairly quickly, but the restaurant is still shut down at the end of the film because of a health inspection. However, Remy’s experience fulfills his dreams and allows him to move on from under the shadow of Gusteau to his own restaurant.

Remy’s ability to cook makes him a special rat, but it isn’t what helps him succeed. What does is his willingness to grow and change. It is his ability to see food, the world, and himself at their fullest potential.

Ratatouille opened yearning in my heart for a cramped apartment on top of Paris, seeing all the lights around me in the city of dreams. It’s the best food movie because nothing will ever taste as good as a piece of cheese and a strawberry in the hands of a rat, their flavors a display of pink and yellow fireworks. It’s about the joy in a good bowl of soup, of laying under the stars and thinking only about what you’re eating, about someone making omelets for you right as you wake up, about a perfect bowl of ratatouille your mother sets on the table after wiping your tears. It’s about the joy of going off–recipe knowing you could fail, but ever moving forward, leaving your mark on the world.

A Lot or a Little?

The parents' guide to what's in this movie.

What Parents Need to Know

Parents need to know that, like all of Pixar's other films, Ratatouille includes nuanced humor (about the French, haute cuisine, food critics, and so on) and references aimed directly at adults. Kids will miss most of these references but most likely will still enjoy the plot and animal characters. Not surprisingly for an animated kids' movie, the protagonist, Linguini, is an orphan -- although at least he's a young adult and not a child. There's some moderate peril involving the rats and weapon-wielding humans that may frighten sensitive and younger viewers; the sewer sequence is particularly tense and potentially scary, as is the gun-toting grandma. Two characters kiss, and there are a few mild insults, such as "stupid" and "loser," and one "hell."

Community Reviews

  • Parents say (158)
  • Kids say (197)

June 6, 2022

Why does a movie for young children need to include a gun? They could have found other silly creative ways to achieve the story line without a gun.

1 person found this helpful.

December 9, 2020

THIs iS A VeRy GooD MovIE

this story is about a rat who is a chad in-fact who wants to become a chefs the restaurant declines his letter of recommendation which he tends too rob the place molest the customers and re-sell it if nothing had changed. The meaning of the film in my eyes was: Rats are alphas and will always be alphas.

This title has:

Great messages

Great role models

Too much violence

Too much sex

Too much swearing

Too much consumerism

Too much drinking/drugs/smoking

1 person found this helpful.

What's the Story?

RATATOUILLE follows the culinary adventures of Remy (voiced by comedian Patton Oswalt), a unique rat who can't stomach eating garbage. He wants the good stuff -- truffle oil and fine artisan cheeses -- which brands him the snobby black sheep of his crew. After Remy's family is driven from their habitat by a gun-toting grandma, he emerges onto the streets of Paris, where he's visited by the ghost of renowned, recently deceased uber-chef Gusteau (Brad Garrett), who was famous for the populist saying "Anyone can cook." Remy is drawn to Gusteau's now three-star restaurant (it lost a star after Gusteau died), where he feels right at home ... before being sighted and nearly killed by flying knives. Remy, quick with the spices, saves young kitchen helper Linguini (Lou Romano) from ruining the soup of the day, and the two form an odd-couple bond. From then on, Remy becomes part Mister Miyagi, part puppeteer as he helps Linguini cook up delicious specials that put Gusteau's back on the culinary map. But as Linguini soaks in his new fame as the chef du jour, Remy grows increasingly bitter that someone else is taking credit for his recipes. The film's nemeses are Gusteau's new head chef -- an angry little dictator (Ian Holm) who wants to make millions selling a line of prepackaged frozen foods -- and Anton Ego (Peter O'Toole), a food critic who loves writing negative reviews.

Is It Any Good?

The story doesn't have the emotional depth of The Incredibles or Finding Nemo, but the animation is every bit as dazzling. Every scene of the chefs shredding, peeling, dicing, and stirring is vibrant and layered. And the moment Ego tastes the titular dish is so delicious a visual reference that it deserves to be a surprise. Kids may ultimately favor the child-centric appeal of Toy Story or the vroom-vroom adventure of Cars, but grown-ups will find a reason to ask for seconds of Ratatouille.

At this point, it's pretty much a given that families and young children will line up to see anything made by Pixar, which seems incapable of producing a dud. But Ratatouille, like director Brad Bird's family adventure The Incredibles, is the rare animated film that could just as easily captivate an audience full of childless adults. Granted, the world of haute French cuisine is an unlikely setting for a kid-friendly flick, but Bird makes it irresistible.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about what made kids want to see Ratatouille. Does it matter that the title is hard to spell/pronounce or that the main characters are rats?

  • Do kids know the Pixar brand name? Does that make them more likely to want to see a movie?

  • Families also can discuss the film's theme: pretending to be something you're not. Linguini takes credit for Remy's cooking ideas to look like a chef, and Remy turns away from his rat family to be with his human friends and eat good food. How does pretending catch up to each of them?

  • How do the characters in Ratatouille demonstrate perseverance and integrity? Why are these important character strengths?

Movie Details

  • In theaters: June 28, 2007
  • On DVD or streaming: November 6, 2007
  • Cast: Brad Garrett, Lou Romano, Patton Oswalt
  • Director: Brad Bird
  • Studio: Pixar Animation Studios
  • Genre: Family and Kids
  • Topics: Cooking and Baking
  • Character Strengths: Integrity, Perseverance, Teamwork
  • Run time: 110 minutes
  • MPAA rating: G
  • Last updated: March 31, 2022