Food Inc: Movie Review
Rating: 6/10
Director: Robert Kenner
It's no surprise that at a time when sustainability and the grow your own
ideals continue to permeate our society, we should get a doco about the truth
about the foods Americans buy at their supermarkets.
In Food Inc, that's precisely what Robert Kenner does as he looks at what is
consumed these days, how it's produced and what the personal cost is.
With input from Fast Food Nation's author Eric Schlosser and Michael Pollan
who wrote The Omnivore's Dilemma, the veil on the industry is lifted.
I imagine for most of us here in New Zealand the revelations contained within
Food Inc won't shock a lot of people - it's no surprise that mega companies now
control the majority of food production.
However, what is shown on screen doesn't lose any of its impact - amid
graphics, we learn of the personal horrors being committed by the mega
businesses as they try and stop the family farm from growing.
The cheap factory mentality manifests itself as you see how one farmer's
being prosecuted for helping other farmers save seed - his actions and desire to
prove his innocence have led to years of court cases, which he can't ever win -
it's continuing proof that the odds are stacked against the Davids in this fight
against Goliath.
One particular case, halfway through, is designed to emotionally stir you up
- a young child who was diagnosed with haemorragic e-coli from meat and
unfortunately died. While the doco makers could have used this as their trump
card, it's a sensitive portrayal of the fight of the family to get the law
changed and to make a difference as well as have some good come from
tragedy.
Food Inc's broken down into three sections - first, it covers the industrial
production of meat; secondly, it's about grains and vegetables and finally,
about the pesticide industry.
All of the major companies talked about in this film obviously refuse to
appear so it's fair to say while the doco isn't biased, it certainly doesn't
have both sides of the argument represented.
That said, Food Inc presents a compelling case which you feel engrossed in
throughout - it throws up several issues which, if you're not already aware of
them, may shock you into wanting to do something to break the mega-corp
influence. Hopefully this film may start to see some kind of change implemented
- and is proof that if ever you thought people power can't start something,
you're wrong.
At Darren's World of Entertainment - a movie, DVD and game review blog. The latest movie and DVD reviews - plus game reviews as well. And cool stuff thrown in when I see it.
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I truly do NOT understand how someone can see Food Inc and continue eating factory farmed meat. My only explanation is that people choose to "ignore" the situation.
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