Food and The Great Gatsby
I went to see The Great Gatsby today - a movie where the characters spend a lot of time in typical social eating environments, but rarely actually consume any food. They go to parties (and drink); they go to bars and clubs (and drink), but I don't recall them eating much at all.
Nick is the exception, but his food (the cupcakes for tea with Gatsby and Daisy) is a sign of exactly how maladapted to this particular world he is. It's played as funny: the "innocent outsider" character trying to participate in a culture that's ultimately beyond him. The other characters don't seem to eat at all; even when Nick comes to lunch at the end, all they seem to have is booze and cigarettes.
I've read the book a couple times but can't remember if the same is true in the actual novel, or if it's just the movie. But either way, I like it as an aspect of the story, as an outer sign of how emotionally and psychologically malnourished everyone in the novel seems to be. It reminds me a lot of The Sun Also Rises and the desperate expats drinking absinthe for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.