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The Film
[Rating:4/5]
The subject of what goes into the food we eat is a personal one for me. Being someone who is physically sensitive to most of the additives,like nitrites and monosodium glutamate — an ingredient that masquerades on our food labels under various different monikers — that are being added to our food more and more at an alarming rate, I was more than eager to take a look at director Robert Kenner’s exposé on the ever more powerful food industry, Food, Inc.

Food, Inc. grants that the efficiency inherent in our modern production methods has increased production and driven down food costs, but at what price? Food is cheap, but only bad food is cheap, the film posits. Government subsidies on corn and other crops like soy due to big business’ demand for those products at below-market cost has led to a flood of corn-based chemicals and products in nearly everything we eat. High Fructose Corn Syrup, maltodextrin, xanthan gum, ascorbic acid, and sucrose are just a few of the ingredients that appear in nearly all of the “cheap” foods on our store shelves.
The film also takes a look at the mass production in the slaughterhouses, the inhumane treatment of cattle, pigs, and chickens and the inhuman conditions that low-paid workers made up of mostly minorities, and immigrants, both legal and illegal, are made to work under. A connection between the feeding of corn to cattle and the development of highly resistant strains of E. coli is even discussed.
Food, Inc. is certainly a scathing look at the agriculture industry, and it stops to make you wonder about what you are putting in your mouth for consumption. Its one deficit is that it skips through its talking points a little too quickly. There are moments when you wish some of these topics were explored in more depth. The actual impact that these chemicals and methods of production have on human health and the environment are only breezed over. And the film somehow completely missed any mention of monosodium glutamate as a serious problem in our food supply.
Video Quality
[Rating:3/5]

Audio Quality
[Rating:3.5/5]

Supplemental Materials
[Rating:3/5]

The supplements provided on this release are:
- Deleted Scenes (1.78:1; 480i/60):
- Cheapness Comes at a Price
- There’s No Place Called Away
- Honoring the Pigness of the Pig
- It Could Happen Again
- Smells Like Money
- It’s in the Grass
- Designing the Perfect Pork Chop
- We’re in an Epidemic Now
- Celebrity Public Service Announcements (1.33:1; 480i/60):
- Child Nutrition Act
- Ingredients
- Alyssa Milano
- John Salley
- Anhtony LaPaglia and Gia Carides
- Martin Sheen
- Kelly Preston
- ABC News Nightline “You Are What You Eat”: Food With Integrity (1.33:1; 480i/60) — A segment from ABC’s Nightline, which originally ran in June 2009. The founder of Chipotle’s discusses his restaurant’s philosophy on serving only naturally raised food.
- “The Amazing Food Detective” and “Snacktown Smackdown”: Stay Active and Eat Healthy (1.33:1; 480i/60)
- Resources
- Food, Inc. — The Book
- Theatrical Trailer
- Also from Magnolia Home Entertainment Blu-ray (HD):
- The Answer man
- Is anybody There?
- The Great Buck Howard
- HDNet
- BD-Live
The Definitive Word
Overall:
[Rating:3.5/5]




