The Actor’s Limitation
Julia Roberts may have claimed cultural affinity or spiritual interest in Hinduism at some point. But in the movie “After the Hunt” she didn’t catch the saag paneer error. She didn’t notice the basmati rice problem. She didn’t question the meal’s impossibility.
She’s getting old. Julia Roberts isn’t expected to be a food expert. But if she’s playing a character before whom Indian food is verbally listed and placed by waiter, someone should have prepped her. Someone should have said “this meal doesn’t make sense.” Either no one told her, or she didn’t push back.
At her career stage, she has power. She could have asked questions. She could have demanded accuracy. She chose not to, or didn’t know enough to care.
The Age Factor
Older actors sometimes take “prestige” projects without scrutinizing them deeply. The A-list cast, the serious director, the important themes look appealing. The details get overlooked. Younger actors hungry for breakthrough roles might research harder. Older established stars trust the team around them. Roberts trusted the wrong team.
The Hindu Connection
Even if Roberts has genuine interest in Hinduism or Indian culture, that doesn’t mean she knows cuisine. Religion and food culture are different domains. Plenty of people claim spiritual connection to India without understanding daily material reality. They know yoga and meditation, not how meals actually work. But if you stay in India for long, you can not miss cuisine combinations, unless you are sticking to your own menu at all the times.
A 10-minute scene. The waiter reciting ordered menu slowly while serving. Database spirituality meets database cuisine. The whole nutritional logic did not make sense. The person who wrote “saag paneer” into the script didn’t just get the name wrong. They don’t understand:
- What saag actually is
- Why dishes combine the way they do
- How Indian cooking thinks about nutrition
- Basic food logic
They saw “saag” and “paneer” in separate contexts online and mashed them together. Database research at its worst.
Julia Roberts would have said: “This makes no sense. Saag is already protein. You don’t add more protein. Use palak paneer or don’t use it at all.” She had time during rehearsal, during shooting, during ADR to think “does this meal make sense?” She didn’t. Or she did and was told it’s fine. Either way, she failed to use her power to get it right.
American Arrogance
The film tries to be sophisticated. Philosophy keywords. Complex themes. Elevated dialogue. But it can’t get basic food logic right. Can’t understand why proteins don’t double up. Can’t respect the culture it’s exploiting for market access.
The film demonstrates American arrogance. We know better than you about your own culture. We’ll use your cuisine as decoration. We’ll sell to your market. But we won’t actually learn from you or include you. An Julia Roberts became part of this arrogance.
Arrogance plus ignorance equals saag paneer.
The Sad Reality
Great actors can be let down by terrible material. Roberts brought her skill. She held that enigmatic sadness for as long as you could watch. But she didn’t protect herself from the script’s failures. She trusted people who were using AI prompts and database research instead of actual knowledge.
At her age and status, that’s a mistake she could have avoided.
An Insult
Even Julia Roberts, with decades of experience and massive industry power, couldn’t save a film assembled by amateurs using AI poorly. The system failed her. But she also failed herself by not questioning enough. Getting old means you should know better. Should demand better. Should use your power to get the details right. She didn’t.
And now she’s the face of a film that insults 1.4 billion people with nutritionally stupid food combinations and impossible meals.
That’s on her too.
