The: Menu Motphim

What starts as an avant-garde interpretation of trauma on a plate quickly escalates into violence. Slowik reveals that the guests—and his staff—have been complicit in the degradation of art and humanity. Tonight’s service is not just dinner; it is a "last supper." The menu is designed to punish the guests for their vanity, greed, and superficiality.

The Menu is a reminder that when we treat art—and people—as disposable commodities, we eventually lose the very thing that made them worth consuming in the first place. The Menu Motphim

: An unexpected, down-to-earth guest who disrupts the chef's carefully orchestrated plans. What starts as an avant-garde interpretation of trauma