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    Grossest Movies Ever

    The grossest food movies of all time: It's a new definition of horror

    Marene Gustin
    Marene Gustin
    Sep 27, 2014 | 4:20 pm

    I think we can all agree that Chef and The Hundred-Foot Journey can be added to the list of our favorite food movies. Beautiful stories, incredible food cinema, they justly belong on the list of such greats as Babette’s Feast, Big Night and Chocolat.

    These are films that foodies love, films that make even non-foodies drool over the delicious footage.

    But, there are films that will put you off your feed if not cause you to toss your cookies. Films like the classic horror flick Poltergeist.

    This clip is not for the squeamish and after watching it you will never eat steak after midnight again.

    In a scene, he eats a live cockroach. Yes, it’s disgusting and Cage has said in several interviews that he actually did eat the live roach.

    And I haven’t had a glass of lemonade since Eli Roth’s 2002 Cabin Fever. Drink beer, not the water or lemonade made with the damn water!

    A lot of cultures eat bugs. I myself have enjoyed the tiny tacos stuffed with crunchy fried chapulines — grasshoppers — at Hugo’s. But you might think twice about eating them if you’ve seen Nicholas Cage in 1988’s Vampire’s Kiss. In this scene he eats a live cockroach. Yes, it’s disgusting and Cage has said in several interviews that he actually did eat the live roach. Talk about dedication to your craft, or just plain crazy. Watch this and you’ll freak out the next time a Houston roach invades your home.

    And maybe lay off the pasta after watching Se7en, the 1995 film about a serial killer offing victims using the seven deadly sins. Yeah, the gluttony victim is forced to eat spaghetti until his stomach explodes. It’s a totally gross idea that we don’t actually see onscreen, only the aftermath is shown, but that’s enough to make you cut back on the carbs.

    And then there’s the whole cannibal thing.

    Cannibalism is real and has been practiced by various groups, desperate people and murderous villains from the Donner party to Jeffrey Dahmer. But in film it can be everything from terrifying (Soylent Green is People!) to comical, if a bit dark, like the scene in The Rocky Horror Picture Show where the guests dine on Meat Loaf. No, not meatloaf. Meat Loaf.

    Rory Calhoun was a huge cowboy actor in the 1950s and '60s but in his later years he starred in several cult classics like the 1980 Motel Hell. A real schlock fest where Calhoun portrays a farmer who kidnaps tourists, buries them in his garden and feeds them until they are fat enough for him to turn them into meat pies. “It takes all kinds of critters . . . to make Farmer Vincent’s fritters.”

    And then there’s the gross out scene from Hannibal where the serial killer is feeding Ray Liotta his own brain. Self-cannibalism? In fact, the whole movie is about gross eating scenes as Hannibal Lecter is a cannibal and then there’s the whole man-eating hogs thing that might make you want to start asking what the bacon you eat was fed.

    Of course there’s also pretty much any zombie movie ever made. Except the early ones like White Zombie in 1932 and the few in the 1940s where the zombies are sad shells controlled by voodoo masters. It wasn’t until George Romero’s classic Night of the Living Dead that zombies became angry flesh eaters.

    And will there be cannibals in the new season of The Walking Dead that starts next month? Some fans think so.

    And there’s The Cook the Thief His Wife & Her Lover, a movie that I routinely list on my favorite food films because of the beautiful restaurant scenes with the fabulous tablescapes and food shots. But the real kicker is the final cannibal scene where the thief is forced to dine on his wife’s lover before she kills him. Helen Mirren is wonderful in this role.

    So enjoy these films if you are horror food fans. Just eat before you watch any of them.

    And happy early Halloween. Bwaaa, haaa.

    The real kicker is the final cannibal scene of The Cook the Thief His Wife & Her Lover where the thief is forced to dine on his wife’s lover before she kills him.

    The Cook the Thief His Wife & Her Lover, dinner scene
    Courtesy photo
    The real kicker is the final cannibal scene of The Cook the Thief His Wife & Her Lover where the thief is forced to dine on his wife’s lover before she kills him.
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    news/restaurants-bars

    say hey to Hypsi

    Houston chef's hip new Italian restaurant now open in Heights hotel

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 4, 2025 | 5:05 pm
    Hypsi restaurant food spread
    Photo by Julie Soefer
    Hypsi serves pasta and other Itaian-inspired dishes.

    A new Italian restaurant is now open in the Heights. Located within the newly opened Hotel Daphne, Hypsi marks chef Terrence Gallivan’s return to professional cooking in Houston.

    Known for his time as the co-execuive chef of The Pass and Provisions and owner of ElRo Pizza and Crudo, Gallivan brings strong culinary credentials to Hypsi. Although he isn’t known explicitly for Italian fare, he has significant experience making pizza, pasts, and other Italian-inspired dishes. After closing ElRo last year, the chef says that working for Bunkhouse Hotels, the Austin-based company that operates the Daphne, had a lot of appeal.

    “My wife and I always made it a point to stop at their places whenever we’re in Austin. They know how to make cool stuff,” Gallivan says.

    Hypsi’s menu includes updated takes on Italian fare begins with starters such as lamb meatballs, black truffle arancini, and Caesar salad. A selection of house-made pastas include squid ink radiatori with rock shrimp, butternut squash tortellini, and lumache with vodka sauce that gets a little heat from nduja. Entree choices include a roast chicken, pork Milanese, and roasted snapper with salsa verde.

    The restaurant is also open for breakfast during the week and brunch on the weekends with items such as a panatone waffle, frittata, and breakfast sandwich. Lunch will follow in January.

    “We took inspiration from tradition without being traditional,” Gallivan says. Later, he adds, “For me, it’s about balance. You try to please everybody. I want my mom to enjoy herself as much as a 25-year-old foodie. It’s important to hit as many marks as you can.”

    One of the restaurant’s signatures will be the mozzarella cart that rolls through its dining room. Gallivan says he’s sourcing a mix of both American and imported Italian cheeses that will rotate every week or two. The cheese is served with a range of pickled fruit and vegetables, olive oil, aged balsamic vinegar, focaccia, and more. Of course, seeing a cart immediately grabs diners’ attention, making them want whatever is on offer.

    “That’s the beauty of carts,” Gallivan says. “It’s a fun thing to do. I think sometimes we get a little too serious in restaurants. It’s supposed to be fun. People are here to enjoy themselves.”

    All that eating and drinking takes place in a dining room that’s inspired by Prohibition-era speakeasies, according to press materials. Details include blueberry lava stone on the bar, vintage velvet chairs, and custom Carimate dining chairs by Vico Magistretti. An outdoor patio features brick pavers, mosaic tables, and sculptures.

    Hypsi restaurant food spread

    Photo by Julie Soefer

    Hypsi serves pasta and other Itaian-inspired dishes.

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