Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Movie Review: ‘Food, Inc. 2’ revisits food system, sees reason for frustration and (a little) hope !

Movie Review: ‘Food, Inc. 2’ revisits food system, sees reason for frustration and (a little) hope

Time:2024-05-21 07:15:26 source:Worldly Window news portal

The makers of the influential 2008 documentary “Food, Inc.” never planned to make a sequel. They figured they’d said it all in their harrowing look at a broken, unsustainable food system — a system led, they argued, by a few multinational corporations whose monopoly squeezes out local farmers, mistreats animals, workers and the soil itself, and makes all of us less healthy.

But 16 years after that Oscar-nominated film, they’re back with “Food, Inc. 2.” What happened? Well, first of all, the pandemic — an event that both strained our food system and revealed its precariousness, they say.

Also, the filmmakers suggest, it was perhaps naive to assume that informed, ethical shoppers could alone reverse such an entrenched narrative. “You can change the world with every bite,” the first film had argued, urging consumers to buy local and organic, patronize farmer’s markets, demand healthy school lunches and most of all, read labels and understand what they’re eating.

Related information
  • Liverpool confirms Arne Slot as Jurgen Klopp's replacement
  • Olympic flame arrives in Marseille amid tight security
  • Armand Duplantis soars to new world record in Xiamen Diamond League
  • Love, friendship sparkle at Xi'an Diving World Cup
  • Insider Q&A: CIA's chief technologist's cautious embrace of generative AI
  • Nearly 30,000 Chinese tourists visit Sri Lanka
  • Toshiba to cut 4,000 jobs to turn business around
  • China gears up for International Museum Day celebrations
Recommended content
  • Red Lobster seeks bankruptcy protection after closing some restaurants
  • How ancient city on Silk Road attracts global fans
  • Chinese FM holds talks with US secretary of state
  • FIFA Congress expected to reach important decisions
  • Devout Christian doctor, 68, who punched dementia
  • Toshiba to cut 4,000 jobs to turn business around