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Food, Inc.
Directed by
Robert Kenner
PG
2008
1h 33m
Documentary
,
News
7.8
95%
86%
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An unflattering look inside America's corporate controlled food industry.
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Where to Watch Food, Inc.
Hoopla
Free
Kanopy
Free
Philo
Subscription
+6 more
Cast of Food, Inc.
Michael Pollan
Himself
Eric Schlosser
Himself
Richard Lobb
Himself - National Chicken Council
Vince Edwards
Himself - Tyson Grower
Carole Morison
Herself - Perdue Grower
Robert Kenner
Director / Writer / Producer
Elise Pearlstein
Writer / Producer
Kim Roberts
Writer
Food, Inc. Ratings & Reviews
Chicago Reader
Cliff Doerksen
Smart, gripping, and untainted by the influence of Michael Moore.
San Francisco Chronicle
Amy Biancolli
A mind-boggling, heart-rending, stomach-churning expose on the food industry.
Detroit News
Tom Long
If you are what you eat, we are mostly genetically modified, poorly regulated, unhealthy meat byproducts generating profits for a few gargantuan corporations.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Joe Williams
In exposing the unsavory practices of agribusiness, the muckraking documentary Food, Inc. cuts to the bone.
The New Yorker
David Denby
An angry blast of disgust aimed at the American food industry.
The Hollywood Reporter
Kirk Honeycutt
A riveting if distressing look at the essentially unregulated American food supply.
Seattle Times
Michael Upchurch
The result is an alarming film that tackles food and freedom-of-speech issues on many fronts.
Washington Post
Ann Hornaday
This absorbing film looks terrific and does a superb job of making its case that our current food ways are drastically out of whack.
Boston Globe
Wesley Morris
The whole thing is as subtle as a watermelon in a bowl of Cheerios but necessary, nonetheless.
Chicago Tribune
Michael Phillips
If Wal-Mart, the Lucifer of multinational corporations in many liberal eyes, sees the fiscal sense in stocking an increasingly wide array of organic foodstuffs, consumer habits truly are changing.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
It's not a pretty picture. But Food, Inc. is an essential one.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
This review doesn't read one thing like a movie review. I just wanted to scare the bejesus out of you, which is what Food, Inc. did to me.
Associated Press
Christy Lemire
Kenner presents an even-tempered but nonetheless horrifying dissection of the U.S. food industry.
Variety
John Anderson
Does for the supermarket what "Jaws" did for the beach -- marches straight into the dark side of cutthroat agri-business, corporatized meat and the greedy manipulation of both genetics and the law.
New York Post
Kyle Smith
Trading on now-familiar gross-out tactics (images of corporate slaughterhouses and chicken sheds), the movie offers very little that food radicals don't already know.
Los Angeles Times
Gary Goldstein
Suffice it to say, after the film's disturbing glimpses inside the meat industry, along with its blunt indictment of fast food giants, you'll think twice before eating just about anything nonorganic.
MovieFreak.com
Sara Michelle Fetters
Kenner's documentary is a grabber from the very first frame, and the fact my refrigerator's vegetable bin suddenly finds itself filled with organics when it never had been before isn't even close to a coincidence.
Salon.com
Andrew O'Hehir
An engaging and often wrenching film, Food, Inc. covers a wide range of material, including the horrific, the humorous and the exemplary.
New York Times
Manohla Dargis
One of the scariest movies of the year [is] Food, Inc., an informative, often infuriating activist documentary.
Austin Chronicle
Kimberley Jones
An engaging, cohesive narrative that informs but never scolds.
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