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Comida, S.A.

Título original: Food, Inc.
  • 2008
  • PG
  • 1h 34min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.8/10
53 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Comida, S.A. (2008)
An unflattering look inside America's corporate controlled food industry and its trickle-down effects on the country's farmers and the health of its citizens.
Reproducir trailer2:16
1 video
99+ fotos
Food DocumentaryNewsDocumentary

Una mirada poco favorecedora al interior de la industria alimentaria estadounidense, controlada por las corporaciones.Una mirada poco favorecedora al interior de la industria alimentaria estadounidense, controlada por las corporaciones.Una mirada poco favorecedora al interior de la industria alimentaria estadounidense, controlada por las corporaciones.

  • Dirección
    • Robert Kenner
  • Guionistas
    • Robert Kenner
    • Elise Pearlstein
    • Kim Roberts
  • Elenco
    • Michael Pollan
    • Eric Schlosser
    • Richard Lobb
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.8/10
    53 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Robert Kenner
    • Guionistas
      • Robert Kenner
      • Elise Pearlstein
      • Kim Roberts
    • Elenco
      • Michael Pollan
      • Eric Schlosser
      • Richard Lobb
    • 205Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 62Opiniones de los críticos
    • 80Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
      • 7 premios ganados y 20 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Food, Inc.
    Trailer 2:16
    Food, Inc.

    Fotos125

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    Elenco principal30

    Editar
    Michael Pollan
    Michael Pollan
    • Self - Author, 'The Omnivore's Dilemma'
    Eric Schlosser
    Eric Schlosser
    • Self - Author, 'Fast Food Nation'
    Richard Lobb
    • Self - National Chicken Council
    Vince Edwards
    Vince Edwards
    • Self - Tyson Grower
    Carole Morison
    Carole Morison
    • Self - Perdue Grower
    Troy Roush
    • Self - Vice President, American Corn Growers Association
    Larry Johnson
    • Self - Center for Crops Utilization Research, Iowa State University
    Allen Trenkle
    • Self - Ruminant Nutrition Expert, Iowa State University
    Barbara Kowalcyk
    Barbara Kowalcyk
    • Self - Food Safety Advocate
    Patricia Buck
    • Self - Food Safety Advocate, Barbara's Mom
    Diana DeGette
    • Self - Representative, Colorado
    Phil English
    • Self - Representative - Pennsylvania, Co-Sponsor of Kevin's Law
    Eldon Roth
    • Self - Founder of BPI
    Maria Andrea Gonzalez
    • Self - Mother
    Rosa Soto
    • Self - California Center for Public Health Advocacy
    Joel Salatin
    Joel Salatin
    • Self - Polyface Farms Owner
    Eduardo Peña
    • Self - Union Organizer
    Gary Hirshberg
    • Self - CEO, Stonyfield Farm
    • Dirección
      • Robert Kenner
    • Guionistas
      • Robert Kenner
      • Elise Pearlstein
      • Kim Roberts
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios205

    7.852.8K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    9rasecz

    Must-see documentary for anyone who eats

    It is said that if you like eating sausage, you better not see how it is made. If you like eating meat, don't watch an animal being killed. If you have your fill of fruits and vegetables daily, don't think about the pesticides that coat them.

    Our modern society has sanitized the presentation of food so that we can blissfully ignore what we should be concerned with: where food comes from, how it is raised, picked, handled, altered, transported and sold. Instead our attention is focused only on the awesome number of beautiful packages on market shelves, the unblemished fruits and vegetables available year round. In our increasingly artificial world appearance trumps taste, price trumps provenance, and industrialization gives us a false sense of safety.

    It is therefore opportune to have the release of "Food, Inc". After you see it, you'll probably not shop for food in the same way. You may even change the kinds of food you eat. Not enough to convince me to become a vegetarian, but the ubiquitousness of corn and its derivatives, stated multiple times in the film, has made scouring of package labels a routine. The easy rule of not buying anything that contains more than five ingredients more frequently obeyed.

    The film contains material that has already been brought out by others, for examples, (1) the problem of genetically modified seeds crossing into properties that do not want them and (2) the appalling conditions in which farm animals are kept. Some material is stressed too much, for example, the whole issue surrounding the tragic death of a kid from a very virulent form of E.coli and the attempts to establish regulations that might prevent such deaths. Individual cases are worth mentioning, but systemic and widespread issues are more compelling. The death of one is no doubt a tragedy but the impairment of thousands is of greater social consequence.

    The issue of food regulation in general is a subject that I would have liked to see more of. The adverse effect of more regulation (as per the example above) can be too much regulation. The subject is briefly broached by the "good farmer" (Joel Salatin) who kills his chickens in the open. Ironically those chickens are likely to be more healthy and tasty. Regulation may eliminate this practice. Regulation can therefore have a negative impact on food culture. One of the best example of this is preventing the importation into the US of many delicious young unpasteurized cheese from Europe or even the marketing of such cheese by US producers. How many get sick from those cheese compared to the number of sick from peanut butter or spinach?

    The film unwittingly projects a bit of naiveté in a couple of places. The segment about an individual being sued by a food conglomerate and essentially losing for lack of money is not news. This is a capitalist system: more money, better lawyers, almost certain victory. Yet the point is well taken that the food conglomerates are behaving in thuggish ways and acting with the protection of a complicit government (the best money can buy). But again, uncontrolled capitalism generates monopolies and they will fight tooth and nail to retain control and squash any semblance of competition. It's the logic of the beast. This not limited to food. Since voting habits have brought the US to this state of affairs, our only recourse as consumers is to eat bananas, and only bananas, for breakfast, lunch and dinner. It's called the Chiquita Diet.

    In any case, this is a must-see documentary. The director is to be commended for having the courage of tackling this very important topic.

    Don't forget to buy a five gallon basket of popcorn dripping with oleo and a big soda with plenty of high fructose corn syrup before going into the screening room. It may be the last time you do.
    JohnDeSando

    Food Fight

    "Faster, fatter, bigger, cheaper." A farmer describes fast food folly.

    Although I would like to call Food, Inc. a horror film, I must relax my delicate eating sensibilities to call it a disturbing documentary. Images of little chickens hanging like laundry on conveyor cables above fast-moving assembly lines and cows patiently standing knee high in feces have changed my attitude toward grilling.

    Robert Kenner's Food, Inc. isn't half the fun of a Michael Moore doc in which the infamous director savages everyone from auto execs to neocons. Kenner is more credible because he doesn't viciously pursue any one official, just the food industry itself (and McDonald's more than any other), which has become oligarchic and impersonal, endangering the quality and safety of consumers. Unlike Moore, Kenner has no sense of humor.

    Like almost all documentarians, Kenner smartly offers ways to change the barbaric methods and marketing of food. In truth too little praise is given to the food giants that have provided good nutrition and cheaper food in an amazing harvesting that can feed the world. Narrator/interviewer Eric Schlosser (Fast Food Nation) and scientist Michael Pollan (UC Berkeley) modestly present their cases for food abuse such as the demand in corporations like McDonalds for "faster, fatter, bigger, cheaper."

    On the point of treating animals with kindness, the documentary has encouraged me to consider vegetables.
    9Jamesbond1974

    One of the Best Documentaries I have seen in a while, and Canada can learn a lot from this mess....

    Did you know that it only takes 48 days for a chicken to go to market. Is this natural? This film explores how food is grown, and the concerns that people have, such as the e-coli outbreak that seems to happen every year. I am a lover of meat, but after this film you will want to change some of your practices like switching to Organic etc. This film also explores demand for certain products that are not Genetically modified.

    We all have to eat but we can make decisions based on facts, instead of based on perception. People need to be aware that their consequences may have dire repercussions, so if you need to eat, and we all do, then go out and see this.
    8Quinoa1984

    stuff to know, whether you like it or not... if you like it, I don't know what to do for you

    Food, Inc is essential viewing even though it's not a great movie. Much like An Inconvenient Truth its facts and accumulation of information trumps style or overall craft. This doesn't mean that the director isn't making a bad film or doesn't have some clever visual cues and transitions or know how to combine interviews and archival footage, since he does. But it's the precious interviews he gets, and just leaving the theater knowing that American food (or just stretching worldwide) is run by four corporations and that the farming industry as is advertised as "the American Farmer" is in deep trouble.

    It's separated into sections, and each one has something interesting. The one that got to me personally was the section on chickens, how they, like cows as well, are genetically engineered to get bigger a lot faster than they used to, and how the working conditions are at best hazardous and at worst untenable. We see one woman interviewed, the only one who bucked her corporate bosses, to let the cameras in to the state of the chicken coop. Even if one hasn't seen a regular chicken coop before, the state of this place, the stark and dark mis-en-scene, gives us a picture of how it is. As someone like myself who likes a good piece of chicken every now and again, it made me about as guilty as imaginable.

    But perhaps that's part of the point of Food, Inc - get us informed to the point where we're scared s***less. The downside may be the reach; while Inconvenient Truth had the boost of a Vice President, the big names in this documentary are authors, one of which wrote Fast Food Nation (and, surprisingly, eats a hamburger on camera, from a diner of course, and speaks about how burger and fries are some of his favorite food to eat despite the horrors of the fast food industry). So it's difficult to say how many people will see this who don't already have some idea about the atrocious conditions in slaughterhouses, the outbreaks of E-Coli that affect countless people including little Kevin as seen in the film, and Monsanto's patent of a soybean seed that they genetically altered. Between that last part alone and a little factoid made about Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas, it's no wonder one leaves the theater flabbergasted.

    There is some hope the film provides, however. A Virginia farmer, who treats all of his livestock with care and feeds them right (not copious amounts of CORN, which, by the way, is practically coming out of your ears as you read this), gives a few moments to reflect on how the ideal of the American farmer, of what they can give to the community and how they can try and be reasonable with having to do the inevitable of killing living things for food. Hell, the director even has Wal-Mart's one really good moment in the documentary sun in years with its endorsement of organic products. But whatever you're own persuasion on food- be you a hardcore vegan or someone just coming from McDonalds before the movie starts- Food, Inc can make some sort of difference, if only for the information. I know I may not stop eating certain foods, but I'll never forget to give another look or a double take on what's in it- or what may not be there at all. This movie is good, valuable stuff.
    9druid333-2

    Careful With That Burger, Eugene

    With family run farms pretty much a thing of the past, institutional farming has pretty much taken over,and the dim,dark & dismal effects are omnipresent. There is an epidemic of food borne illness,due to cattle being exposed to over use of steroids to make them grow fatter, faster (and this also includes chickens,pigs,etc.),not to mention GMO corn,grains,etc. Robert Kenner's eye opening film, 'Food,Inc.' manages to shine at least some light on some pretty unethical practices that are being undertaken by corporate owned & managed farms. The likes of Eric Schlosser (author of 'Fast Food Nation',which was made into a semi fictional film a few years back)is featured in interviews,along with Michael Pollan. Many fingers are pointed at guilty parties doing the dirty deeds of the farming industry,along with some pretty unpleasant footage of unethical practices (i.e. abuse of farm animals, although this film doesn't take up any kind of vegetarian/vegan agenda of it's own---the viewer can make up their own mind just what they prefer to eat). Much to my surprise,there is little discussion of the mad cow disease epidemic (or,BSE)from a few years back (only a passing reference). Rated PG by the MPAA,this film contains some unpleasant footage of animal abuse,as well as a rude word,or two. Okay for older children who care about what's on their plate for breakfast,lunch or dinner.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      On the Region 1 DVD packaging, the UPC bar-code on the cow is different from the one shown on the theatrical poster. The bar-code on the poster is 4-73762-52481-6-(18). The bar-code on the Region 1 DVD packaging is 8-76964-00216-5 : the same bar-code that appears on the back cover of the DVD. As of 2022, the bar-code used on the poster is not an active code.
    • Citas

      Michael Pollan: There are no seasons in the American supermarket. Now there are tomatoes all year round, grown halfway around the world, picked when it was green, and ripened with ethylene gas. Although it looks like a tomato, it's kind of a notional tomato. I mean, it's the idea of a tomato.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Durch die Nacht mit...: Tim Raue und Dave Arnold (2009)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Sunny L.A.
      Written by Nancy Peterson

      Performed by Great American Swing Band

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    Preguntas Frecuentes19

    • How long is Food, Inc.?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 4 de junio de 2010 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site (United States)
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Food, Inc.
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Carolina del Norte, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • Magnolia Pictures
      • Participant
      • River Road Entertainment
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 4,417,674
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 60,513
      • 14 jun 2009
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 4,606,199
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 34 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.78 : 1

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