Food, Inc.

The surest way for a critic to cripple attendance at a movie he thinks is important is to say, "This is an important movie!" And yet, I’m going to have…

The surest way for a critic to cripple attendance at a movie he thinks is important is to say, "This is an important movie!"

And yet, I’m going to have to chance it, because "Food, Inc.," which opens here today, is an important movie. It’s a very important movie, one that may have an effect – perhaps a major effect – on how we live, one that shows, sometimes painfully, how and why Americans are being forced to eat an unhealthy diet.

How? By the actions of mammoth company feedlots, farms and processing plants that are perfectly content to produce food that they know contains harmful bacteria.

Why? Because it makes lots of money for corporate executives.

Robert Kenner, a veteran documentary filmmaker, directed "Food, Inc." and was part of a team of producers and writers that included Eric Schlosser, author of "Fast Food Nation," Elise Pearlstein and Kim Roberts, who also edited. In addition, Michael Pollan, probably the nation’s best-known food and nutrition writer, shows up as a speaker and an advocate. Pollan is the author of "The Omnivore’s Dilemma" and "In Defense of Food," among others.

Kenner is an advocate, too, and the film certainly is one-sided. Monsanto, one of the major villains of the story, Perdue and other giant corporations reportedly ordered those in working relationships not to speak on camera and generally stonewalled the entire project. Monsanto has an entire website here  to say the film is "one-sided and biased," and to dispute Kenner’s claims.

I believe Kenner.

And I believe him because I believe the people he interviewed, like the woman who lost her contract to grow chickens for Perdue because she refused to cover all the windows in the giant coops where the birds live from birth to death. And the farmer in Indiana who insisted on his right to use seed from this year’s crop to plant next year’s, and who sold seed to his neighbors who did not want to plant Monsanto’s, genetically modified with potential harmful results to future generations of people. Monsanto sued, forced him to name his buyers and finally drove him out of business because he could not afford the legal fees to continue his battle. And Joel Salatin, who knows the animals he raises, is unromantic about their fate and still loves them

Film of chickens being slaughtered, of cows unable to stand, are often unsightly.

Film of people who discover that soda costs less than milk, that candy costs less than fresh vegetables and who talk about a child who died from E. Coli poisoning are more so.

A small change in buying, cooking and eating habits could make a large change in the way our food suppliers treat us and what we eat, and that’s the importance of "Food, Inc."

At the Plaza Frontenac

-Joe

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