Nonnas Movie Review

Featured image for “Nonna’s Movie Review: A Film That’ll Make You Laugh, Cry, and Crave Pasta,” showing a warm, inviting Italian theme with a cinematic vibe.

A Film That’ll Make You Laugh, Cry, and Crave Pasta

Nonnas: A Movie About Food, Family, and the Absolutely Necessary Use of Olive Oil

Let me just say it straight: I loved this movie like I love perfectly salted pasta water. Deeply. With intention.

This is your official Nonnas movie review, and I’m telling you: Nonnas is the kind of Italian food film 2025 was waiting for. You sit down expecting something light and vaguely charming about an American Italian man rediscovering his roots, and two hours later, you’re weeping into your tea towel, wondering if you should text your mother, your therapist, or your childhood neighbour who made ravioli from scratch in 1998.

It is that kind of film. And yes, it’s about food. But it’s also about grief, joy, and the radical act of making dinner for someone you love.

Vince Vaughn, but Make It Tender

In Nonnas, Vince Vaughn plays Joe, a Staten Island maintenance guy who’s lost his mother, his joy, and maybe a bit of himself. He’s not a burned-out chef or a food critic- he’s just a guy. A guy dealing with grief, loneliness, and a stubborn New York accent.

And then, he opens a restaurant. Not just any restaurant. One where real Italian nonnas cook the food of their youth, in their own way, with their own recipes. It’s chaotic. It’s imperfect. And it’s pure magic.

And for those of you asking what is a nonna or what does a nonna mean? It’s the Italian word for grandmother but it’s also a vibe. A nonna is someone who will insult your life choices while ladling you a third helping of ragù. She’s part therapist, part chef, part neighbourhood surveillance camera. In short: an institution.

I haven’t seen Vaughn this good in years. He’s wry, raw, and just awkward enough in an apron. You believe him. You root for him. You want him to win, because the idea he has is so beautiful that you don’t know why no one thought of it before.

The Real Stars: Nonna’s Cast of Legends

A promotional still from the film “Nonnas,” showing the cast standing outside a restaurant, representing the real-life inspiration from Enoteca Maria where grandmothers from around the world cook traditional dishes.
Susan Sarandon, Talia Shire, Vince Vaughn, Brenda Vaccaro, and Lorraine Bracco in Nonnas
Credit: Jeong Park/Netflix

Now let’s talk about the Nonna’s cast, because this ensemble delivers standout performances across the board. The film doesn’t just revolve around food; it simmers with emotion, humour, and chemistry.

Orbiting Vaughn’s Joe is a constellation of powerhouse women and familiar faces who absolutely devour every scene they’re in:

Susan Sarandon brings a glamorous flair as Gia, Joe’s mother’s lifelong friend and hairdresser, who becomes the restaurant’s pastry chef, offering both desserts and wisdom. Lorraine Bracco is bold and outspoken as Roberta, a proud Sicilian and the first nonna to join Enoteca Maria, bringing her generations-old recipes and strong opinions. Her rapport with Brenda Vaccaro who plays Antonella, a feisty widow from Bologna who brings her passion for cooking and life to the restaurant, is a highlight to watch. Rounding them out is Talia Shire who portrays Teresa, a former nun with a quiet demeanor and a storied romantic history, adding depth and nuance to the kitchen dynamics.

Their performances are a masterclass in character. They steal the show with their sly humour, kitchen clatter, and side-eyes that could curdle milk. They don’t just represent heritage; they are the heritage. When they talk about food, you feel it in your molars. Food and memory served family-style. Nonna’s recipes are less about technique and more about instinct. One pinch of salt, two of heartbreak, and a whole lot of garlic.

Think of it like Call Me By Your Name, Chef, and a Hallmark Christmas film had a baby, and the godparents were Sophia Loren and Lidia Bastianich.

It must also be said, the Nonna’s nonna cast is so good, so effortlessly charming, that halfway through you find yourself wanting a spin-off where it’s just them bickering over sauce and laughing at Joe’s expense. Honestly, give them a bottle of limoncello and a dinner table, and I’d watch three seasons.

There’s something incredibly refreshing about seeing older women cast in roles that aren’t just token grandmothers, but full-bodied characters with backstories, sass, heartbreak, and bite. Nonna’s is quiet proof that women’s roles don’t need to fade after 35, they just need better writers, and ideally, more garlic.

Besides the Nonnas, the rest of the supporting cast is stellar. Joe Manganiello plays Bruno, Joe’s lifelong best friend and contractor. Bruno is the kind of guy who shows his love by swinging a hammer and delivering a perfectly timed meatball sub. Manganiello brings warmth and authenticity to the role, embracing his Italian heritage with pride. Drea de Matteo portrays Stella, Bruno’s wife and the neighbourhood’s resident truth-teller. As an interior designer, Stella helps Joe transform the restaurant space, all while offering candid advice and heartfelt support. Lastly, Linda Cardellini takes on the role of Olivia, Joe’s high school prom date turned legal advisor and love interest. Olivia, now a first-year law student, assists Joe with the restaurant’s legal matters and rekindles a connection that adds a layer of romantic tension to the story.

Visually Delicious

Freshly made spaghetti with tomato sauce being served onto a plate, a comforting nod to Nonna's kitchen.
A rustic menu really gets your appetite going in Nonnas

This is not your typical shiny, showy food movie. There are no tweezers or foams in sight. Nonnas is messy in the best way: sauce-splattered, flour-dusted, olive oil-slicked. The kind of food you want to bury your face in, not post about and forget.

The cinematography is rich and romantic. Sauces glisten. Garlic sizzles in slow motion. Recipes are handwritten in looping script that looks like a grandmother whispering across time.

And then there’s the lamb’s head.

Yes. A full-on, unapologetic lamb’s head makes an appearance – teeth, tongue, the works, courtesy of one of the more bold nonnas, who serves it with the casual confidence of someone who has absolutely seen things. It’s one of those unforgettable moments where the film reminds you: this is not some sanitised version of heritage cuisine. This is the real stuff. The parts people forget. The parts with stories.

When Joe eats a simple pasta dish made by one of the nonnas, you can practically see the grief and gratitude swirl together in the steam. That’s Nonnas in a bite. Food and memory inextricable.

This isn’t just one of the best food movies of the year. It’s one of the most truthful.

At one point, Jack finds an old handwritten sauce recipe from his mother, and you feel it in your chest. It’s not just a dish, it’s a resurrection. That moment alone qualifies this as one of the best food movies in recent memory.

Hospitality Is the Plot

As someone who lives and breathes restaurants, this film felt like a warm, perfectly set table. Nonnas captures the soul of Italian hospitality in cinema: the welcome, the tradition, the humour, the chaos.

It doesn’t try to be cool. It doesn’t fetishise food. It just loves it. In a way that reminds you why dinner tables matter, why recipes are memory maps, and why a bowl of pasta can say everything you never managed to.

A Bromance Built on Bricks, Not Feelings

Joe Manganiello as Bruno and Vince Vaughn as Joe Scaravella in Nonnas. Netflix
Joe Manganiello as Bruno and Vince Vaughn as Joe Scaravella in Nonnas. Image Courtesy Netflix

There’s a moment in Nonnas that slips in so softly, you almost don’t realise it’s an emotional sucker punch until later. Bruno, played by Joe Manganiello, is Joe’s childhood best friend. A contractor, a husband, a Staten Island guy’s guy. He’s the kind of man who speaks through action, not monologue. In other words, a classic male friendship.

There’s no dramatic outburst, no weepy heart-to-heart. But when Joe’s dream of opening the restaurant begins to wobble under the weight of permits and budget nightmares, Bruno quietly sells his car to keep things afloat. Not because he was asked to. Not because there was a grand gesture waiting to happen. Simply because his friend needed him, and that was enough.

It’s such a beautifully observed bit of emotional storytelling: this idea that men may not always talk about their feelings, but they’ll give you their car if it means seeing you happy. It lands especially well in a film that’s so much about community, chosen family, and the language of care.

Italian Nonnas, Indian Dadis: Cut From the Same Apron!

There’s also a strong thread of cultural overlap woven through Nonnas, one that feels instantly familiar if you’ve grown up in a desi household. These Italian grandmothers? They’re our dadi-mas, our naanis.

They hoard sugar sachets from cafés. They start cooking for 20 even when you only invited four. They believe in food as medicine, punishment, affection, apology, and celebration, often all in the same meal.

Whether it’s Nonna Roberta’s lamb’s head stew or your Amamma’s pepper rasam, both are rooted in instinct and served with the same line: “Beta, just taste it and tell me what it needs.” As if you’d dare critique it.

Like Italians, we give food in hard times. We bring rasam when someone’s sick, biryani when someone’s mourning, and something sweet the minute there’s even a whiff of celebration. We don’t ask, “How are you?” We say, “Have you eaten?”

In that way, Nonnas doesn’t feel foreign. It feels very close to home.

The True Story Behind Nonnas

Cast of the film “Nonnas” posing in front of a restaurant, wearing aprons from Enoteca Maria.
Vince Vaughn, Joe Scaravella, Bruno Tropeano and Joe Manganiello as Bruno on the set of Nonnas. Image Courtesy Netflix

The story that inspired Nonnas began long before the cameras rolled, in a quiet moment of grief and memory. After losing his grandmother, father, mother, and sister, Joe Scaravella, a Brooklyn-born MTA mechanic, found himself adrift. He moved to Staten Island, carrying his sorrow like luggage, and happened upon a vacant storefront near the St. George Theatre.

Instead of opening a traditional Italian restaurant, he chose to build something far more personal, a tribute to his family and the flavours of his childhood. In 2007, Joe opened Enoteca Maria, a place where the kitchen wouldn’t be run by trained chefs, but by grandmothers from different regions of Italy. These women brought their own handwritten recipes, their own dialects, and their own histories. One night might be Calabrian comfort food, the next Neapolitan or Sicilian, depending on who was cooking.

This wasn’t about precision plating or culinary theatre. It was about honouring the way food connects us to the people we’ve loved, and in many cases, lost. The smells, the textures, the rituals-all of it was meant to evoke home, memory, and continuity.

Years later, the idea expanded. Joe began inviting grandmothers from all over the world to cook at the restaurant, launching the “Nonnas of the World” initiative. Now, the rotating kitchen has hosted women from countries like Bangladesh, Poland, Syria, and Peru. One day it’s lasagna, the next it’s kabsa or pierogi.

In Nonnas, Vince Vaughn steps into Joe’s shoes, fictionalised but faithful in spirit, capturing that quiet ache of loss and the unexpected joy of rediscovery. While the characters in the film include composite elements and creative embellishments, the heart of the story remains rooted in truth: grief becoming a gathering, and strangers becoming family over saucepans and shared stories.

If you’re ever in Staten Island, you can still visit Enoteca Maria, sit at one of its tables, and eat a dish prepared by someone’s grandmother. It may not be your nonna, but it will feel close enough.

Final Thoughts

Nonnas is a film for anyone who’s ever tried to cook their way through grief, or joy, or uncertainty. It’s a reminder that sometimes, the biggest thing you can do is make a meal. And sometimes, achieving something amazing just means following your heart… all the way to a second helping.

So yes, this is a food movie. But it’s also a love letter.

Watch Nonnas with someone you love. Watch it hungry. Then make lasagna and call your mum.

Because if you ask me, that’s cinema.

*Cut to the Chase*

Pros: Vince Vaughn delivers a heartfelt performance; the ensemble cast, including Susan Sarandon, Lorraine Bracco, Talia Shire, and Brenda Vaccaro, shines; the film offers a rich portrayal of food and memory; visually stunning with mouth-watering dishes.

Cons: Some scenes may feel overly sentimental; the pacing is leisurely, which might not appeal to all viewers.

 Stream or Skip: Stream it. Especially if you’re a fan of heartwarming stories that intertwine food, family, and rediscovery.

My Rating: 4.5/5

Where to watch Nonnas: Netflix

In the mood to taste some pasta that feels rustic and oh-so-good? Click here for a great suggestion. If you’d rather read more about food and culture, click here for my recommendation. Or if you want to watch something short and light after Nonnas click here.

This blog post is part of ‘Blogaberry Dazzle’
hosted by Cindy D’Silva and Noor Anand Chawla
in collaboration with Mister Tikku.

37 thoughts on “Nonnas Movie Review

  1. Harjeet Kaur says:

    Thank you for this amazing review, Meetali. I was searching for a light watch and here pops up your review of Nonnas. I am going to watch it right away. I have had my fill of toxic watching and Nonnas seems like its just right up my alley.

  2. Preeti Chauhan says:

    ‘Nonnas’ is on my watchlist too. Watching the talented Susan Sarandon as a glamorous grandma would be quite a feast in itself.It ticks all the right boxes for me being a food lover myself.

  3. Manali Desai says:

    I, too, watched Nonnas recently and absolutely loved it! The warmth, the humor, and those beautiful stories behind every dish really stayed with me. Totally agree with your review—the nonnas stole the show, and it was such a feel-good watch from start to finish.

  4. Anjali Tripathi Upadhyay says:

    Thank you for this amazing review. I was actually on the lookout for something light to watch , and then your post landed just at the right time, like the perfect plate of comfort food. The way you described the nonnas — part chef, part therapist, part neighbourhood CCTV, had me grinning. And Vince Vaughn in an apron? Count me in. It sounds like a warm, nostalgic hug in movie form. Watching it right away.

  5. Jeannine says:

    As someone raised on my grandmother’s recipes, Nonnas deeply resonated with me. The film beautifully portrays how food connects us to our roots and loved ones. Thank you for this heartfelt review.

  6. Sameeksha says:

    Thank you this absolutely mind-blowing recommendation. As a rom-com person I wasn’t sure but the way you expressed this slice of life I’m convinced this will be in my to-watch list! Also the in-depth review and the magic masala of just the right words you used to capture the attention has worked it’s charm on me.

  7. Pinki Bakshi says:

    I have watched Nonnas and simply loved it, homely, warm, and lovely movie. Towards the end, when I saw the actual footage of the restaurant and how the people are being welcomed and fed, I had this urge to visit that place once and experience the vibe.

  8. Pinki Bakshi says:

    I have watched Nonnas and simply loved it, homely, warm, and lovely movie. Towards the end, when I saw the actual footage of the restaurant and how the people are being treated, I had this urge to visit that place once and experience the vibe.

  9. Tanvi Agarwal says:

    I am not a movie buff but your review is so beautifully written that now I am craving to watch this movie. After Manali’s movies and series recommendation blog, now I am adding yours too so that I can filter which ones to watch in little time when I rarely watch.

  10. Shalini R says:

    Okay, I am watching this NOW! Period. I love shows and movies that revolve around food and this is a great recommendation, Meetali.

  11. Samata says:

    Humour is something which we all crave for in this todays complicated world. Thanks for sharing this review I will make sure to watch it very soon.

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  13. Pamela Mukherjee says:

    I was waiting for the confusion of whether I could watch Nonnas or not. Thanks for your wonderful review, which created the perfect curiosity about the movie. Watch the movie next for sure.

  14. Swati says:

    Thanks for such an inviting review ; simple, heartfelt, and well-written. Your writing made me feel like I’d spent an evening with Nonna herself!

  15. Varsh says:

    Hollywood food movies are the best. The way they include food in the narration and give it centre stage while creating a beautiful story around it is magical. Definitely watching this movie. Thanks for the review!

  16. Ritu Bindra says:

    Give me a book or a show around food and I’m in. You are correct about Italian and Indian grandmothers. In fact, grandmothers everywhere are the same. Thanks for sharing such a lovely review.

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