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Fast Food Nation

  • 2006
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
26K
YOUR RATING
Fast Food Nation (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Fox Searchlight Pictures
Play trailer1:29
12 Videos
68 Photos
SatireComedyDrama

When contaminated meat is placed in the freezer next to that used for a fast food chain's most famous sandwich, a marketing executive seeks to find out who did it and why, taking a journey t... Read allWhen contaminated meat is placed in the freezer next to that used for a fast food chain's most famous sandwich, a marketing executive seeks to find out who did it and why, taking a journey through the dark side of American alimentation.When contaminated meat is placed in the freezer next to that used for a fast food chain's most famous sandwich, a marketing executive seeks to find out who did it and why, taking a journey through the dark side of American alimentation.

  • Director
    • Richard Linklater
  • Writers
    • Eric Schlosser
    • Richard Linklater
  • Stars
    • Greg Kinnear
    • Bruce Willis
    • Catalina Sandino Moreno
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    26K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Linklater
    • Writers
      • Eric Schlosser
      • Richard Linklater
    • Stars
      • Greg Kinnear
      • Bruce Willis
      • Catalina Sandino Moreno
    • 177User reviews
    • 145Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos12

    Fast Food Nation
    Trailer 1:29
    Fast Food Nation
    Fast Food Nation Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 1:20
    Fast Food Nation Scene: Scene 3
    Fast Food Nation Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 1:20
    Fast Food Nation Scene: Scene 3
    Fast Food Nation Scene: Scene 2
    Clip 1:01
    Fast Food Nation Scene: Scene 2
    Fast Food Nation Scene: I Don't Know If There Is Anything That I Can Do
    Clip 0:39
    Fast Food Nation Scene: I Don't Know If There Is Anything That I Can Do
    Fast Food Nation Scene: Here's How It Goes Down
    Clip 1:23
    Fast Food Nation Scene: Here's How It Goes Down
    Fast Food Nation Scene: The Facts Are Not Always Friendly
    Clip 1:49
    Fast Food Nation Scene: The Facts Are Not Always Friendly

    Photos68

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    Greg Kinnear
    Greg Kinnear
    • Don Anderson
    Bruce Willis
    Bruce Willis
    • Harry Rydell
    Catalina Sandino Moreno
    Catalina Sandino Moreno
    • Sylvia
    Wilmer Valderrama
    Wilmer Valderrama
    • Raul
    Ana Claudia Talancón
    Ana Claudia Talancón
    • Coco
    Juan Carlos Serrán
    • Esteban
    • (as Juan Carlos Serran)
    Armando Hernández
    Armando Hernández
    • Roberto
    • (as Armando Hernandez)
    Frank Ertl
    Frank Ertl
    • Jack
    Michael D. Conway
    Michael D. Conway
    • Phil
    • (as Michael Conway)
    Mitch Baker
    Mitch Baker
    • Dave
    Ellar Coltrane
    Ellar Coltrane
    • Jay Anderson
    • (as Ellar Salmon)
    Dakota Edwards
    • Stevie Anderson
    Dana Wheeler-Nicholson
    Dana Wheeler-Nicholson
    • Debi Anderson
    Luis Guzmán
    Luis Guzmán
    • Benny
    • (as Luis Guzman)
    Bobby Cannavale
    Bobby Cannavale
    • Mike
    Francisco Rosales
    • Jorge
    Ashley Johnson
    Ashley Johnson
    • Amber
    Paul Dano
    Paul Dano
    • Brian
    • Director
      • Richard Linklater
    • Writers
      • Eric Schlosser
      • Richard Linklater
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews177

    6.325.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6frederique-carre

    Rent the DVD and get the special features

    I read some of the comments made about this film. It does stay at a very superficial level and leaves the audience a bit "hungry" at the end (but not hungry for meat!). I would have wished for more insights - going deeper into the subject.

    I saw some comments about the poor acting and I disagree. I think that all actors had a part and is was nice to bring some stars like Bruce Willis and Ethan Hawke.

    I rent the DVD and I watched the special features which contain 3 episodes of "The Meatrix", starring Moopheus. The folks who created this cartoon delivered the same message as "Fast Food Nation" in less than 15 minutes - I learned as much and it was fun! I highly recommend.
    7swkidder

    Narrative film on the fast food culture in the United States

    This is a difficult film to watch if you are as tired as I am of being ashamed of this country. But maybe, as the film itself says, "The bad guys win until they don't." So go and see it.

    It's well done, with an excellent cast, a reasonable script, cinematography that is occasionally better than you wish it were, and excellent editing. It's a complex film that sets out to tell a number of stories that it believes are inextricably entwined... and succeeds pretty well in doing that. It deals with a number of themes and threads ... social, political, and "human stories" ... and connects them all to a process we have collectively enabled ... the high jacking of the food we eat as well as the culture and economy that should nurture and sustain us ... and instead leave us fat and still hungry.

    Warning to those who love animals, other humans, and may not be sufficiently desensitized to violence and gore .... you will never eat a hamburger again after seeing this film. You might even go on to question chicken. And you will lose any illusions you might have cherished in the past about the extent to which the industry that sells us this crap goes on to affect the lives of people across the Americas.

    You may not enjoy watching Fast Food Nation, but you should make the effort to see it. And, you should make it a point to take at least one person you love that has been eating this kind of junk. You will have done your good deed for the day ...
    5goldbe

    A wasted opportunity-very disappointing

    I had the chance to see this film at this year's Cannes Film Festival. Of all the films I saw, this one was the most disappointing, and the most shockingly mediocre. The film jumps around between a few different, barely interconnected stories, yet none of these segments are explored enough to draw the audience in. For example, towards the end of the film, I began to realize that Greg Kinnear had completely disappeared from the movie without a trace. He is not again seen until the ending credits. The film seems to pride itself on continually throwing in more and more familiar faces, yet these actors prove to be more of a distraction than anything else. Patricia Arquette, Ethan Hawke, Avril Lavigne, Bruce Willis, and others all pop up for a brief scene or two, yet for the most part, they fail to leave any lasting impression. At the films end, I left the theater feeling no more enlightened, no more informed, and no more interested in the topics discussed throughout the movie. Richard Linklater is a great director, and he has cast some great actors, but still, Fast Food Nation fails to compel or leave any sort of impact. My guess is that a year from now, most people will have forgotten about this movie entirely.
    6marshein

    Funny? Not!

    I don't know how this film can be called a comedy. Nauseating yes. Tragic certainly. Funny not a bit.
    6Quinoa1984

    a kind of head on collision of message and character, with the former winning over the latter

    There's a tendency in films of this nature, of the Fast Food Nation kind, where you already know going into it what the message is. It's not quite exactly as immediately black and white as it might seem (at first), but then after a while it becomes much more clear. While filmmaker Richard Linklater doesn't make very simple statements like 'fast food will make you fat', he does try to push the message that the sort of machinery of corporation is similar to that of the assembly line, is what is crippling to those entwined in the circle of cheap product made from dead meat. Which is fine; I'm not one of those that think precisely along the lines of Bertolucci, who was quoted as saying that he leaves messages for the post office and not for film. However, I do expect that if a filmmaker wants to put forward the message- and boy does Fast Food Nation do that more than anything- to make the characters &/or story lines interesting in the dramatic framework. He achieves this, but only up to a point. Narrative focus and dramatic drive only come through much more effectively within the last 45 minutes, while the first half seems startlingly dull, or at the least meandering.

    That being said, I did find elements here and there throughout the weaker section of the film interesting. There's even a spellbinding aerial shot of the seemingly unending field of cattle, waiting for the slaughter. But for the most part early on we're treated to the sort of set-up of the main story lines: a group of Mexican illegals (one of them, Sylvia, played well by Catalina Moreno) get picked up by a guy in a van, and taken to a 'Mart' in town, and go to find work. Most of the illegals find it at a meat-packing/grinding/whatever plant, where what is seen by a quasi executive type, Don Anderson (Greg Kinnear), is not seeing everything he thinks he is when shown around the plant. He meets with a couple of people, one environmentally conscious and protective of his land from corporations (Kris Kristofferson), and another who is cynical and not too optimistic (Bruce Willis, who has one of the best scenes in the film albeit with a speech attached). Meanwhile, as he goes into a Mickey's (ho-ho) to get a 'Big One' burger from Amber (Ashley Johnson), Linklater and co-writer Eric Schlosser also follow her tale of nothingness of the small-town teenage girl.

    All of these stories interconnect at times, or are left to themselves. While one is actually intriguing and ultimately very sad, which is the Mexican immigrants tale (that sense of tragic exploitation going on that ends up finding a place in the 'Nation' sense of the word), the other two either spurt to a halt after a while, or just kind of go on aimlessly until the last few scenes. The former of those with Kinnear doesn't give him that much to do aside from listening to people talk, and on the phone talking to his family. In a way he could've had his own film as a character, like with Wally Wiggins in Waking Life, but on its own Linklater leaves him be after the first hour, and then coming to a wrap-around in a predictably dour manner in the end credits. Amber's story, on the other hand, is sort of the opposite- she is just a small-town girl living in a lonely world (as the song goes), and sometimes listening to idiotic plots to rob the Mickey's by his co-workers, while here and there figuring out the future for herself.

    What's both fascinating and frustrating about the film though could be seen sort of from Amber's storyline, where you see scenes that are convincing both in characters talking like real people (ala Ethan Hawke's moments), but also having not as much to do with the real 'message' going across that one might think- that is until Amber joins up with the young Animal-rights/ecological brigade and goes to cut a fence down to let the cows out. This actually had a real pathos to it, and was even entertaining (probably against Linklater's own intentions). But it's not just the writing or how Linklater connects the stories together. Acting wise it's hit or miss- Moreno is fantastic in a role that ends her up seeing the actual slaughtering of cows (which is staggering, whatever you think about serving meat in fast food). But the huge ensemble either gets their little moments well like Willis or Hawke, or either 'phones it in' like Kristofferson or just outright sucks like Lavigne. There's even a convincing one-note turn by the sleazy, pig manager of the assembly line job (I forget his name), but he too only get to have his character do what's required in the script.

    As I walked out of the theater I realized that this wasn't at all a bad film, in fact it's a a pretty decent effort at dramatizing in small-town/big-ensemble fashion what it is to have the ugliness of consumer productivity. But that I also found it to be, of the films I've seen of his so far, my least favorite of Linklater's, which goes to show how strong a work he can still deliver when when not working at full throttle. And it's a little ironic considering how much of a success I found A Scanner Darkly to be, possibly coming closest to my favorite of his, and how both films take on a specific message to the audience, but one accomplishes it by basing it around characters and a really tightly-knit storyline and style that is consistently engaging, while the other is content to hop around from malaise to shock to whatever. Grade: B

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    Related interests

    Peter Sellers in Dr. Folamour ou : comment j'ai appris à ne plus m'en faire et à aimer la bombe (1964)
    Satire
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film features four castmembers from director Richard Linklater's Boyhood (2014): Ellar Coltrane, Patricia Arquette, Ethan Hawke, and Marco Perella.
    • Goofs
      In the scene where Amber and her friend are driving and talking about going to a college party, an HEB grocery sign is clearly visible in the background. This grocery is only located in Texas, so therefore the girls in Colorado wouldn't be driving by it.
    • Quotes

      Paco: Well I can't think of anything right now more patriotic than violating the Patriot Act!

    • Crazy credits
      There's a scene during the credits: During a presentation, Don pitches a new hamburger called "BBQ Big One".
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Casino Royale/Happy Feet/Bobby/Fast Food Nation/Candy/Come Early Morning (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Cabeza de Mojado
      Written by Joey Burns, Bill Elm, Woody Jackson

      Performed by Friends of Dean Martinez

      Courtesy of Sub Pop Records

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Fast Food Nation?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 22, 2006 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Coyote
    • Filming locations
      • Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA
    • Production companies
      • Fox Searchlight Pictures
      • Participant
      • HanWay Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,005,539
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $410,804
      • Nov 19, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,209,322
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 56m(116 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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