Food Inc. Don’t Take Another Bite Until You See This Movie! Author of Fast Food Nation. McDonald’s Burger King aren’t your only concerns anymore!
Jun 18, 2009 Author: Katie Lara | Filed under: Movie Reviews, Smarty-PANTRIES
So last week I told you about Food, Inc. a movie coming out by Robert Kenner in this post. Here is what we have to say now that we saw this praiseworthy film.
Seriously, don’t take another bite until you see this movie. It’s a horror- flick! Like I always do, when I see a scary movie, whenever I get scared, I comfort myself by saying it’s not real, it’s just a movie. Here though, the stories are true, the interviews with the farmers are with real people. You will be horrified by what you thought was healthy eating. And it’s not like in Fast Food Nation where you could write it off by saying to yourself that you don’t eat at McDonald’s or Burger King. The point though isn’t to horrify you or use scare tactics, rather it’s just trying to show everyone what’s going on. It’s mind-blowing to me what I’ve been going on eating, munching and crunching, blissfully believing the government was effectively regulating.
After this flick this girl is going organic in every possible way I can. I’m not going to go overboard and not eat out, etc. but wherever I can make an effort to, I will. I think that any Smartypanty will see this movie. Your health is important. The meat you are putting in your body becomes part of you. Educate yourself and make a conscious decision to help change the system. It’s as easy as just buying organic. Do you know that Wal-Mart, WAL-MART people, has started carrying organic products? This is a huge step in making organic (aka healthier, uncontaminated, etc.) foods available to the masses and not just those of us who can afford to spend our Whole paycheck at Whole Foods (sorry whole foods we love you but you’re not practical for everyone).
Little things you can do to make a BIG difference to help us get healthier foods for everyone! Whatever we buy the most of gets cheaper and cheaper. So buy the good stuff!
~Stop drinking sodas and sugary beverages
~Buy Organic
~Visit Farmer’s Markets
~Tell Congress Food Safety is important to you
Visit Food, Inc’s Website for more ideas!
If you care about your health or your kids’ you will see this movie.
Smarty-Pantries: Wall Street Journal Article: Fortified Foods. How Healthy Are They? Is Vitamin Water as Healthy as Eating an Orange–Hell to the NO!
Jun 16, 2009 Author: Katie Lara | Filed under: Newsworthy, Smarty-PANTRIES
We’ve always been skeptical about whether fortified juices, sodas, protein bars, and the like are actually as healthy for us as the real food. We’ve never really believed that drinking vitamin water, packed with sugar is counteracted by the vitamins. Click HERE to read a Wall Street Journal article discussing fortified foods.
Smarty-PANTRIES: Food, Inc. Official Movie Trailer American Obesity and Cancer Crisis Can Be Prevented!
Jun 11, 2009 Author: Katie Lara | Filed under: Movie Reviews, Smarty-PANTRIESSo, given our new health kick we’ve decided to start a new feature on our site all about healthy food and what we should and should not be eating, appropriately, it will be called Smarty-PANTRIES…like Kitchen pantries. We’re pretty proud of ourselves for coming up with this one…anyway, we digress.
This movie is what we’ve been waiting for! We think this is so important! Eating healthy and knowing just what you’re putting in your body is something everyone should take a minute and find out about. You’ll be absolutely horrified to find some of this stuff out, but stop living in ignorance, Smartypanties!
The movie is produced by the author of Fast Food Nation, Eric Schosser (great book) and directed by Robert Kenner. They uncover just what’s in your supermarket and you’re not going to like what you see…so do yourself a favor and see this movie. Every item you buy an item at your grocery store you’re either voting for growth hormone induced meat or organic. For processed sugars or natural untainted fruits. Stop kidding yourself that the consumer is powerless! Do something about it! Learn what’s worth your money!
Synopsis: In “Food, Inc.,” filmmaker Robert Kenner lifts the veil on our nation’s food industry, exposing the highly mechanized underbelly that’s been hidden from the American consumer with the consent of our government’s regulatory agencies, USDA and FDA. Our nation’s food supply is now controlled by a handful of corporations that often put profit ahead of consumer health, the livelihood of the American farmer, the safety of workers and our own environment. We have bigger-breasted chickens, the perfect pork chop, insecticide-resistant soybean seeds, even tomatoes that won’t go bad, but we also have new strains of e coli–the harmful bacteria that cause illness for an estimated 73,000 Americans annually. We are riddled with widespread obesity, particularly among children, and an epidemic level of diabetes among adults Featuring interviews with such experts as Eric Schlosser (Fast Food Nation), Michael Pollan (The Omnivore’s Dilemma) along with forward thinking social entrepreneurs like Stonyfield Farms’ Gary Hirschberg and Polyface Farms’ Joel Salatin, “Food, Inc.” reveals surprising–and often shocking truths–about what we eat, how it’s produced, who we have become as a nation and where we are going from here.
We’ll let you know what we think once we’ve seen it. Comes out June 12, 2009 in select cities.
Here are some reviews by cool people who got to see the screening (one day, Smartypanties, one day!):
“Does for the supermarket what ‘Jaws’ did for the beach.”
- Staff, Variety
“More than a terrific movie-it’s an important movie.”
- Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly
“A riveting cautionary tale. This is one movie that truly provides food for thought.”
- Patrick Goldstein, Los Angeles Times
“A cleverly written and well produced documentary. Kenner crafts an intelligent, visually compelling argument grounded in old-fashioned investigative research and journalism.”
- Maria Garcia, Film Journal International
“Excellent in every respect.”
- Pete Hammon, BoxOffice Magazine






























