FOOD INC. (Dir. Robert Kenner, 2008)
I was sad to miss this film at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival earlier this year so I'm glad to see it get distribution and play in my area. As an examination in three parts of American agricultural food production, it's an eye opening and insightful look into the disturbing conditions under which animals are bred by factories while genetically engineered produce is the grocery store norm. Much of this material is familiar; Richard Linklater's FAST FOOD NATION (2006), a comedy drama featuring Greg Kinnear and based on Eric Schlosser's best selling 2000 book, covered the dark side of the fast food industry with a number of the same bullet points made. Schlosser produces and co-narrates FOOD INC. with author and activist Michael Pollan and they give us a much fuller picture than FAST FOOD NATION with the direct concise expert breakdown this subject requires.
Despite many disgusting shots with nauseating descriptions of inhuman practices, this film isn't about grossing you out. Many folks will avoid it with that fear, but FOOD INC. is overwhelmingly concerned with the politics behind our food choices. Schlosser states: "When you go through the supermarket there is a illusion of diversity. So much of our industrial food turns out to be rearrangements of corn." That's just one of many valuable lessons to be found as we see hidden camera footage that was shot by actual employees at the world's largest slaughterhouse and see cows being fed corn while standing in their own manure at the biggest cattle yards in the country.
Again, a lot of folks want to be the dark about where their food comes from so an audience may be hard to come by for this fierce film. Sure ignorance may be bliss, but an education on the politics of the food we eat that should not be ignored. It's not an anti-meat movie either - the end credits are filled, AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH-style, with suggestions for better healthy eating and "become a vegetarian" isn't one of the tips so rest assured carnivores! Maybe the question isn't of an audience, but the 'right' audience for this film - a special showing at the Colony Theater last weekend raised over $2,250 for the Inter-Faith Food Shuttle which will bring wholesome food and essential kitchen equipment to needy families in the area. As it continues its theatrical run with other fundraisers and events planned to promote it, it's sure to build the right audience. And that audience probably won't be buying a large, buttered popcorn to go with it.
More later...
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