Wine’s Finest Movie Moments: The Award for Best Cabernet in a Supporting Role Goes to …

Join me for a pre-Oscars warm-up on Facebook Live Video Sunday, February 18 here:

www.nataliemaclean.com/live

Click on “Get Reminder” to know when we go live.

Here are the wines we’ll be tasting, along with movie snacks such as hot buttered popcorn and salted pretzels:

Veuve Clicquot Non-Vintage Champagne

Gérard Bertrand Cotes des Roses Rosé

Louis Martini Cabernet Sauvignon

Trapiche Pure Black Malbec

 

Meanwhile, on Global Morning Live, we chat about how Hollywood’s most memorable characters, from James Bond to Hannibal Lector, have always had a little help from the wine bottle … and help yourself to those I nominate as the best wines in a supporting role for watching the Oscars this year.

By Natalie MacLean

Although this year’s Oscar-nominated movies have many merits, oenophiles are bitter over the lack of great wine scenes. For example, couldn’t The Wolf of Wall Coppola Directors CutStreet show a little class and decant some Chateau Margaux in the midst of all that excess?

Leonardo DiCaprio’s last pivotal wine scene was in the 2002 movie, Catch Me if You Can.  His character’s parents unwittingly spill wine on the carpet as they’re dancing, then grind the stain in with their feet—a harbinger of darker days to come. (Wine lovers in the audience whispered: “Use salt.” “No, white wine will do it.” Meanwhile, the beer drinkers were able to follow the plot.)

Like some of Hollywood’s most versatile actors, wine has long been cast in both good and bad guy roles: either it is a mark of sophistication or of evil. Rarely, is it neutral in the way beer is.

Perhaps that’s because we view wine as a drink loaded with our own insecurities. For movie wine1example, appreciating wine is often part of both coming-of-age films and make-over movies. In My Fair Lady (1964), Professor Henry Higgins teaches Eliza Doolittle how to taste wine.

In a modern twist on the same theme, Michael Caine plays an aristocratic snob hired to teach the tomboy undercover cop Sandra Bullock how to act like a lady in Miss Congeniality (2002).

In a restaurant, he sips on his red wine while she chugs her beer. Caine says to the sommelier, “Gaston, I’ll have another cabernet sauvignon.” He looks at Bullock and asks, “And another keg for you?”

When the streetwise CIA agent Chris Rock must pass himself off as an art dealer in Bad Company (2002), he’s taught how to appreciate bordeaux and port. And of course, there’s the champagne of James Bond making wine connoisseurship sexy.

But mostly it’s women who are on the receiving end of instruction: In the 1958 musical Gigi, for instance, Lesley Caron must learn to drink wine as part of her training as a courtesan.

The most memorable song in that film (after Thank Heaven for Little Girls, of course) is The Night They Invented Champagne. More than any other type of wine, champagne represents refinement, luxury, love and celebration.

Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman drink champagne in Casablanca (1942) to forget the imminent war. Sam plays As Time Goes By, and Bogie says to Bergman, “Henri [the proprietor] wants us to finish this bottle, and then three more.

He says he’ll water his garden with champagne before he’ll let the Germans drink it.” He offers his classic toast, “Here’s looking at you, kid.”

But when they kiss, the camera pans down to reveal that Bergman has tipped over her champagne glass—symbolizing the end of her happy times with Bogart.

Humphrey Bogart wineMany films use the sophistication and pretension of wine as humour. In Sleepless in Seattle (1993), Meg Ryan’s boyfriend tries to impress her in a restaurant by ordering a bottle of Dom DeLuise.

In Batman Forever (1995), the beautiful Dr. Chase Meridian says to Batman, “I’ll bring the wine, you bring your scarred psyche.”

In The Jerk (1979), the nouveau riche Steve Martin takes his fiancée to a fancy French restaurant. In his opinion, it’s a disaster: First there are snails on the plates, and then they’re served old wine. Martin insists on a bottle of their freshest—and reminds the waiter not to forget to put umbrellas in the glasses this time.

Martin’s the man, after all, who once ordered a “beige wine”—not red, not white, just middle of the road in a Saturday Night Live skit.

And in The Muppet Movie (1979), playing the sommelier to Kermit and Miss Piggy, he brings them a sparkling muscatel (one of the finest from Idaho) and asks if Kermit would like to “sniff the bottle cap.” After pouring, he produces two straws for their glasses.

Wine has also made hundreds of appearances in Hollywood thrillers. In Disclosure (1994) Demi Moore uses wine to instigate some nefarious action of her own. In her executive penthouse office late one night, Moore tries to seduce her new manager, a married man, played by Michael Douglas.

She tells him to pour each of them a glass of wine. Picking up the bottle, a rare Californian cult cabernet, Douglas asks, “Pahlmeyer’91—how did you know I’ve been looking for that?” “Well,” she says, “I want all the boys under me to be happy.”

Of course, those were the sun-dappled days of innocence, before wineries and other consumer products began paying tens of thousands of dollars for such a mention. Word has that Disclosure’s production manager phoned Jayson Pahlmeyer and asked for a free case of his wine to use in the movie.MSDDISC EC012

Pahlmeyer told him that it cost $25 a bottle and hung up. But then Pahlmeyer recalled that the bottle of champagne that Tom Cruise drank in Top Gun had garnered Taittinger $150,000 in free publicity. So he called the production manager back. When Disclosure was finally released, Pahlmeyer’s phone rang constantly, for weeks; and it rang some more after the European release and the television rerun. Had he made four times the amount of wine actually produced, he could have sold it all.

When the Academy Awards air this year, wine lovers will no doubt be watching with a good glass of wine in hand, reminding them of the irritating way that many actors’ hold their wine glass—by the bowl rather than the stem, thereby warming the wine and leaving unsightly fingerprints.

Directors consult all sorts of experts, from set designers to makeup artists; so isn’t it time that they included an oenophile on the team? If nothing else, she could choose the wine when the cast dines out at those chi-chi Hollywood restaurants. Martin Scorcese are you listening?

Posted with permission of Global News.

Wine’s Finest Movie Moments: The Award for Best Cabernet in a Supporting Role Goes to …

Kris: Now of course everyone is gearing up with their Oscar pool. What will you be sipping when you sit down to watch the Oscars? Natalie MacLean joins us. Obviously wine can take a starring or a supporting role in films as well.

Natalie: It can. Exactly!

Kris: Can we go to some of the biggest moments – the highlights?

Natalie: Sure, Yes! I’d love to give out my Oscars for best movie moments in Champagne in the best supporting role.

Kris: I love the bubbly!

Natalie: Isn’t bubbly great? It’s featured in so many films.  If we take the classic ‘Casa Blanca’, you know Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart are saying goodbye and the camera pans down where she tipped over the Champagne glass. It’s a harbinger of things to come. Of course James Bond is very famous for his Champagne. Champagne is in almost all of them.

Kris: Not just Martinis?

Natalie: No. Bollinger is often the Champagne of James Bond before product placement days, when they didn’t have to pay for it. Champagne is pivotal. It’s in a lot of movies to indicate celebration.

Kris: Excellent and then?

Natalie: Well, if we move on …

Kris: Bridget Jones!

Natalie: Bridget Jones! That movie coin the term, ‘Chardonnay Girl’. Helen Fielding is out with another book now. Chardonnay sort of came into its own with Bridget Jones and you know she was home and mopping and eating chocolates with Chardonnay.

Kris: And drinking all by herself.

Natalie: Exactly! That’s a bad pairing, by the way.

Kris: Yes

.

Natalie: Don’t! Chocolates and Chardonnay. We have to move on to Chardonnay. All things come full circle. I am sure Chardonnay will come back in style.

Kris: I’m going to jump over to here.

Natalie: Yes.

Kris: Everyone will remember this.

Natalie: Yes.

Kris: Chianti.

Natalie and Kris: And Fava beans.

Natalie: Yes. In the vain of greasy wine pairings, Fava beans is not a good one.

Kris: But it was a real moment in that movie.

Natalie: It was.  Wine with Hannibal Lector was an indication of his supreme culture, intelligence and learning and Jack’s opposed of course with that barbaric food pairing. In the movie Anthony Hopkins said it is Chianti but in the book it’s Amarone.

Kris: Oh really?

Natalie: So wine lovers were really upset about this because they felt that Hollywood had dumbed it down. They’re both very lovely full-body wines. With Amarone, look for a hardy meat dish of bovine kind.

Kris: And they go well with the Doritos as well?

Natalie: Doritos? Yes! Movie snacks. Popcorn, by the way, for the Chardonnay and Doritos or Pretzels for the big reds.

Kris: Yes and the bubbles clear out the palate.

Natalie: Exactly.

Kris: So anything greasy ….

Natalie: Greasy, salt and vinegar chips

Kris: Excellent! Now we’re on to Hitchcock. Apparently he had wines in his films as well.

Natalie: Yes, there’s a pivotal moment in that movie where they go down to the cellar and Cary Grant exclaims ‘Oh my Gosh, it’s vintage sand!’ It’s the key to unlocking the mystery of the bad guys. They open a Pommard which is a burgundy and all is unfolded.

This one though is a modern day classic Pahlmeyer. We’re moving on to ‘Disclosure’ with this wine.

Kris: Right here. Light in colour, isn’t it?

Natalie: That’s Pinot Noir and its right there. Michael Seresin, he is a famous movie director. So not only are wines in the movies but they’re also made by directors. We look at Francis Ford Coppola at the end.

Kris: Of course, fantastic vineyard.

Natalie: I know, ‘Dracula’ very brooding and dark.

Kris: In California?

Natalie: Yes, and Michael Seresin –think ‘Angela’s Ashes’, ‘Midnight Express’, ‘Harry Potter’ and the ‘Prisoner of Azkaban’.

Kris: Really he has some vineyard?

Natalie: Exactly, and locally here we have Closson Chase, Sonja Smits, if you remember, Street Legal? …

Kris: Oh yes!

Natalie: and her husband Seaton McLean a director, own that in Prince Edward Country, Ontario. Beautiful wines. I should say all of these wines are available. Back to ‘Disclosure’ I do want to mention this because it’s a great scene with Demi Moore and Michael Douglas up in the penthouse. If you remember she’s trying to seduce him and wine plays…

Kris: Oh yes in a very evil way.

Natalie: Yes, exactly! And Michael Douglas says ‘Pahlmeyer, How did you know? How did you find this wine?’ And she goes ‘I like all the boys under me to be happy.’ And she pours the wine and etc., yes …

Kris: What’s interesting here is, do you remember the character of Paul Giamatti played in Sideways, he was a bit of wine snob?

Natalie: Yes, Sideways!

Kris: You know this guy is middle age, going through a crisis and he decides to take a road trip.

Natalie: That’s right!

Kris: But it doesn’t have to be that kind of high braw experience.

Natalie: No.

Kris: You really can pop open a few if you’re having a party.

Natalie: Absolutely! And in Sideways they love Pinot Noir which is the wine closest to you because it was light in fruity. Of course, he sent Merlot on a tailspin; you know his comments about Merlot.

Kris: Yes of course.

Natalie: But a lovely wine to watch the Oscars.

Kris: Of course just don’t drink and drive

Natalie: No, exactly!

Kris: The proper way to taste of course is to spit it out afterwards, there you go.

Natalie: Exactly! Absolutely!

Kris: Cheers!

Natalie: Yes! Cheers!

Posted with permission of Global News.

Leave a Reply