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Kitchen Confidential - The Complete Series

  • Based on 298 reviews
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Arrives Monday, Jul 8
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Description

Jack Bourdain had it all but messed it up going wild. Four years later, he ends up with a crappy job in Pizza Chain. Then, he gets an offer to get back in the game as the chef of a famous restaurant. Having been described as "wicked" and "debauched," Anthony Bourdain's culinary memoir was bound to be a tough sell for network TV. In Kitchen Confidential's sitcom incarnation, dark-haired Anthony becomes blond, blue-eyed Jack (Bradley Cooper). In the pilot, the recovering alcoholic moves from a pizzeria to a brasserie. The catch is that he has to hire a staff in 48 hours, so he turns to pastry expert Seth (Nicholas Brendon, Buffy the Vampire Slayer), seafood genius Teddy (John Cho, Smiley Face), and sous-chef Steven (Owain Yeoman). He also inherits kitchen worker Jim (John Francis Daley, Freaks and Geeks). In reality, Bourdain ran the shop at New York's celebrated Les Halles. In the show, Jack oversees the kitchen at the fictional Nolita. Pino (Frank Langella, terrific as usual) manages the joint, while the wait staff includes his tightly-wound daughter, Mimi (Bonnie Somerville, NYPD Blue) and the bubble- headed Tanya (Jaime King, Pearl Harbor). As in producer Darren Star's Sex and the City, the central character narrates, there's no laugh track, and more of the comedy revolves around sex than work. While Cooper (The Wedding Crashers) isn't the most obvious choice to play Bourdain--and although Kitchen Confidential would've made more sense on cable--he does a surprisingly credible job, even if the writing lets him down on occasion. Realistic or not, severed fingers and singed eyebrows tend to play better in print than on the screen. Of the 13 episodes produced, FOX only aired four (back-to-back with Arrested Development), which is a shame as it was just starting to hit its stride. Guest stars include Bitty Schram ("Exile on Main Street"), John Larroquette ("Dinner Date with Death"), and Cooper's Alias co-star Michael Vartan ("French Fight"). --Kathleen C. Fennessy


Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 1.781


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No


MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ NR (Not Rated)


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 3.2 Ounces


Item model number ‏ : ‎ 10989895959


Director ‏ : ‎ Victoria Hochberg, Matt Shakman


Media Format ‏ : ‎ Multiple Formats, Color, NTSC, Dolby


Run time ‏ : ‎ 5 hours and 25 minutes


Release date ‏ : ‎ February 3, 2009


Language ‏ : ‎ Unqualified


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Monday, Jul 8

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • I've watched this series a billion times. Love it.
I am a big fan of this series. I used to watch it on Hulu before it was removed. Now it's not on any of the platforms I use. The series is so incredibly well-written, funny, pithy, and well-acted. A joy to watch! At this writing, the only way to watch the series is on DVD. So happy. Great investment. Bradley is a riot as Jack Bourdain. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2019 by Susan Gregory

  • Another extraordinary show cancelled by Fox's quick trigger finger
In Kitchen Confidential, Bradley Cooper stars as Jack Bourdain, a NYC chef who is working at picking up the pieces of his lackluster career after years of drinking and drugging. In the first episode, Jack is working as a chef at a Chuck E. Cheese-esque kid's Italian restaurant and living with his girlfriend--also the restaurant's manager. When he's offered the position of head chef at hip bistro Nolita, Jack sees his chance to rebuild his name as a great chef, and get out of the rut he's in. He assembles his kitchen staff from his old coworkers including: Steven, a British thug who's been known to cause plenty of mischief and will serve as Jack's sous-chef; Seth, a pastry chef with a crush on the hostess and a penchant for wearing bandannas as neckties; Teddy, an Asian seafood genius who has a volatile relationship with Jack; and Jim, the nerdy newbie who Jack inherits from the old chef. Together, the team creates an inspiring menu and helps put Nolita on the map as one of the new hip NYC restaurants. Kitchen Confidential takes all of the best parts of Anthony Bourdain's memoir and twists it just enough to make it entertaining fiction rather than verbatim retelling. Bradley Cooper plays the part of Jack Bourdain with just enough wit and candor to remind viewers of Anthony, but with enough of his individual style to make the role his own. The supporting cast are nothing if not hilarious, and the stories of life inside a kitchen will provide fans of shows like Top Chef and Hell's Kitchen with a little fictional fuel for the culinary interest fire. As always, Fox cancelled the show after only 4 episodes aired, but hopefully with the success of the DVD sales (a la Family Guy) viewers might be in store for more Kitchen Confidential in the future. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2007 by K. Hinton

  • Blood, blood, blood everywhere
What's with all the red on white? It happens on the very first episode. Chop! and a chef's finger tip gets cut off, with blood splattering and squirting over a clean white uniform. Oy vey! or should we say, "Mamma Mia"! Then, the waiters have to search for the finger tip in someone's food platter, which is somewhere among all the other food platters in the dining room. I guess that's what happens with too many chefs in the kitchen with sharp knives and bad, arrogant tempers and big, fat mouths. OK, I don't recall any more gore in the other 12 episodes. There is a lot of witty banter, exaggerated flirtations, physical humor, lewdness, jealousies, weirdness, over-the-top humor, craziness, betrayals, drunkeness, infidelity, uncomfortable situations, situations that are "too comfortable" ... Well, you get the point. This would be called adult humor, although, it is not as explicit, (in some cases), as one would expect from my descriptions; this was a Fox TV show (with 13 episodes total) and it was within TV guidelines. In the state where I live, I think the expression would be that the episodes were "wicked funny". I'll just call the show fast, frenetic and funny and comedically crazy and absurd. Oh, don't forget the food: lobster, Portuguese eels, animal organs, rabbit meat, pastries, and so on; and there was even a little furry critter crawling about the storeroom in the episode with the food inspector. Quite enjoyable, though sometimes over the top, comedy that will make you laugh and sometimes cringe. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2011 by Peter Tsang

  • Cooks Tour
KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL is as funny and as bracing as it needs to be, and everything people say about it is right as rain. I watched all 13 episodes back to back and was crushed when it sank in, there's not going to be any more. That said, I can see why people didn't pick up on it at first. Yes, we're dumb animals who don't know what to make of satire, but the KITCHEN CONFIDENTIAL satire was pretty lame. The real trouble was the writers relying on the same basic plot in every episode, which gets tiresome--the plot in question, a challenge to Jack Bourdain's kitchen superiority and consequently his manhood. This pattern lasted well behind the first four episodes, and who knows, would probably still be the master narrative of the show had it not been taken off the air. While many of the men were perfectly cast--and we loved seeing Nicholas Brendon from Buffy and little John Francis Daley now all grown up, though he'll always be Sam Weir to me, the little boy on FREAKS AND GEEKS--Bradley Cooper is maybe a little too lightweight to play the macho, womanizing, hard-living Bourdain character. The women's roles were more problematic. They never did figure out what to do with Bonnie Somerville, what a waste, and while Jaime King was cute and appealing throughout, she never got to play anything but the dumb dingbat--really the Gracie Allen role, but tricked and manipulated into objectification by all the guys on the show. Only Erinn Hayes, as a rival chef, got to play a more three dimensional character, but even she was sometimes hard to take with her constant, abrasive, ambition and her crass sense of humor. But in general, the show was brilliant on many levels and it will be sorely missed. Maybe it's good it went out when it did, for how many shows suffered from sophomore slump and never cough LOST ever cough HEROES got back on track again? ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 2, 2008 by Kevin Killian

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