On a deeper level, the movie was moving (duh). It depicted two loved women, who were trying to love being alive. Their way of enjoying their days became cooking. They ended up having to fight for what made 'em feel useful, successful, engaged, influential, and creative. Child fights to go to a good cooking school, fights to take and pass her graduation test, and fights to get a cookbook done. Powell fights, to keep cooking and writing. Despite discouragement from her mother and the times of "total meltdowns."
There are three things that move about this movie.
One.
Its about small things. In the grand scheme of things, cooking can mean about as much as an umbrella in monsoon. Yet, if we admit it, much of our lives are spent on small things. Things that are far from the field politics, breakthroughs in human health, and international agriculture. It is the small important things that we are built enjoy doing, to enjoy being.
Two.
Their husbands gave these ladies undying support. Yet, Stanley Tucci and Chris Messina acted like real people. They loved their wives but they didn't stop 'em from having bad days and vulnerable moments.
Three.
Most importantly movie poignantly portrayed the interplay between lives. Julia's life and ambition affected the lives of many American women in profound way, it gave joy to her family, it gave two French women a collaborator, and it allowed one book editor to quietly make history. Julie's life and ambition, gave her co-worker a little joy, her family, an adventure to be a part, of her mother something to be proud of, small crowd of internet foodies, something to think about, and to her small crowd of friends it gave them something to eat.
"Man's chief end is to glorify God and enjoy him forever."
Like Bezalel and Oholiab (Exodus 36), Heman and Asaph (1 Chronicles 6:39), Saul/Paul (Act 2), Darrell Green, Gerald Ford, Ira D Sankey, and Jessica Flannery pay attention to the small things that give you joy. God made you that way to enjoy the little things (not worship, enjoy) is to enjoy life (Ecclesiastes 9:9, 1 Timothy 6:17).