Food films to inform and inspire
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If you're craving good films on the food system, Food Tank has put together a list of documentaries and films to inspire, educate, and give viewers some food for thought. Each film explores a different topic in food and agriculture, some with a dash of social equality or a splash of health awareness. Whether you're a social activist, small farmer, or sustainability advocate, or you just enjoy food, we're sure you'll find a food film to further inform and interest you in all things food.
Here are 19听films to satisfy your food films palette:
: 鈥淎merican Meat鈥 walks viewers through the evolution of animal agriculture and highlights alternative animal husbandry systems that protect the environment and animal welfare. The film features farmer and advocate Joel Salatin, who uses sustainable land management methods, such as rotational grazing, and emphasizes the importance of supporting one鈥檚 local foodshed. The film also highlights stories from other farmers nationwide who are raising cows, pigs, and chickens in environmentally sustainable and humane ways.
: In 鈥淒ive! The Film,鈥 Director Jeremy Seifert and his friends highlight food waste in America by dumpster diving in various grocery stores around Los Angeles. Every American wastes around 20 pounds of food every month, costing U.S. consumers an estimated US$165 billion each year, according to the听. The narrators evidence these facts by finding massive amounts of edible food in the dumpsters and confront store managers on their food donation policies. This multi-award winning documentary not only reveals the wasteful practices of grocery stores听but also urges individual consumers to change their habits by offering advice and practical home solutions to reduce household waste.
: The inventive documentary 鈥淓mpire of Scents鈥 highlights the power of our sense of smell鈥攈ow it affects, directs, and triggers our emotional lives. Director Kim Nguyen, nominated at the 2013 Oscars for 鈥淲ar Witch,鈥 takes viewers on a visually impressive journey across five countries that inspires viewers to question how much they really know about one of the most basic human senses.
: 鈥淔armageddon鈥 takes an alarming look into excessive government oversight of American food producers. Director Kristin Canty reveals stories of government harassment and outsized force against small, independent farms that were coerced into stopping production. Canty, a mother of four, tells the story of her struggle to find the foods of her choice, such as raw milk, from the producers she wanted. In an听听about her film, Canty says, 鈥淚 hope that we can come to realize that America鈥檚 farms, farmers, and homesteaders deserve a place here, and should not be under attack by our own government.鈥
: 鈥淔ood Chains,鈥 produced by actress Eva Longoria and听Fast Food Nationauthor Eric Schlosser, reveals the plight of farmworkers, the foundation of our food industry. Filmmakers follow a group of Florida tomato pickers in their quest for a more dignified work life through the Fair Food Program. The program brings growers and retailers together to improve farmworker working conditions. 鈥淭he goal is to address human rights and labor rights that exist in the fields. The creation of the program comes directly from the participation of the workers in the program and the ideas of our community. That鈥檚 what we call worker-led social responsibility,鈥 says farmworker and organizer Gerardo Chavez.
: In 鈥淔ood, Inc.,鈥 filmmaker Robert Kenner details how the growth of industrial farming and the political power of major food companies have put human health, the independent farmer, farmworkers, and our environment at risk. The film is widely recognized as one of the most influential documentaries ever made and was nominated for Best Documentary in the 2009 Academy Awards. Despite its dire overview of the current food system, 鈥淔ood, Inc.鈥 inspires viewers to do their part in changing the food system. 鈥淵ou have to understand that we farmers...we're gonna deliver to the marketplace what the marketplace demands鈥eople have got to start demanding good, wholesome food of us, and we'll deliver; I promise you,鈥 says Troy Roush, an Indianan farmer featured in the film.
: 鈥淔RESH,鈥 released in 2009, celebrates farmers, researchers, and activists who are reinventing the food system by developing innovative methods to grow food sustainably. By using unconventional farming practices, these agricultural pioneers hope to address food contamination, environmental pollution, natural resource depletion, and the growing obesity problem. Profiled characters include Will Allen, who converted acres of industrial wasteland into productive farmland in Milwaukee, and David Ball, who started a cooperative of local farmers in Kansas City to provide an alternative to the traditional supermarket.
: 鈥淭he Future of Food鈥 was written and directed by Deborah Koons Garcia and focuses on the social, economic, and environmental impacts of the proliferation of genetically engineered foods. Viewers see the issue from the perspective of small farmers, who are held legally responsible when genetically engineered, patented seeds spread into their fields. The documentary also criticizes the imbalance of power between international food companies and local farmers and the ecological harm of industrial agriculture practices, such as monoculture farming.听听calls the firm a "sober, far-reaching polemic against genetically modified foods.鈥 Since the release of the film in 2004, the GMO-labeling debate has intensified, making this film even more relevant for viewers today.
: This 2009 Oscar-nominated documentary tells the story of South Central Farm鈥攁 14-acre community garden in South Central Los Angeles that had been gardened for more than a decade by primarily immigrant, Latino families. The land was entrusted to the community as part of a healing effort after the 1992 Rodney King Riots. However, when the land was sold back to its original owner in 2003 by the city, the farmers were forced off the land. The Garden highlights how the farmers, along with their civil rights attorney and other activists, fought hard against the complex Los Angeles politics to keep their garden鈥攃ritical to their way of life鈥攁nd protect their community.
: French documentary director Agn猫s Varda鈥檚 2000 film gives viewers a glimpse into the lives of gleaners. Varda interviews people who scavenge for food in the fields and orchards of the French countryside as well as those who search for leftover items from urban markets and dumpsters. 鈥淭he Gleaners & I鈥 encourages viewers to re-evaluate the culture of consumption, especially towards food, all while marveling at the resourcefulness of the gleaners.
: Director Phie Ambo鈥檚 鈥淕ood Things Await鈥 follows Danish farmer Niels Stokholm through his battle against government bureaucrats to keep his farm, Thorsh酶jgaard, and preserve the Danish Red dairy cattle. Stokholm practices biodynamic farming, which is an ecological, ethical, and sustainable approach to farming and supplies some of the country鈥檚 most well-known restaurants. Unfortunately, agricultural authorities unversed in biodynamic principles threaten the very survival of Thorsh酶jgaard and its unique way of farming.
: This 10-minute film was created for a Bon App茅tit exhibition in Paris. It describes how developed countries can address food insecurity by investing in international development and consuming more foods with lower environmental impact. Created for children ages 9 to 14, 鈥淗ow to Feed the World?鈥 explores food justice, dietary insufficiencies, the economic consequences of food aid, and the idea of a new type of agriculture for feeding more people with less environmental harm.
: Based on Michael Pollan鈥檚 best-selling book, 鈥淚n Defense of Food鈥 delves into Pollan鈥檚 advice to "eat food. not too much. mostly plants.鈥 Pollan coins the term nutritionism to describe Americans鈥 adherence to dietary fads and critiques the American food industry鈥檚 emphasis on specific nutrients rather than whole foods. According to Pollan, 鈥渁s eaters we feel whipsawed by the changes in the nutritional advice we鈥檙e getting.鈥
: In the 2014 documentary 鈥淛ust Eat it,鈥 couple Jenny Rustemeyer and Grant Baldwin pledge to eat only food that would otherwise be thrown away for a period of six months鈥攁n effort to better understand the depth of the food waste problem. The amount of food the couple finds is shocking and encourages viewers to rethink their food behavior, especially around issues such as expiration dates and the aesthetics of produce. In an听听with National Public Radio, Rustemeyer says, 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot that we as individuals can do. It's not like other environmental and social issues, where it's a systemic problem that we don't play a part in.鈥
: 鈥淎 Place at the Table鈥 is a moving documentary chronicling the challenges of the food insecure in America. The stories highlight the economic and social implications of hunger in a country where听听suffer from food insecurity. The film, produced by Magnolia Pictures, takes us into the lives of a single mother trying to provide for her kids, a fifth grader who depends on her neighbors to feed her, and a second grader whose health issues are exacerbated by her poor diet.
: This 60-minute documentary follows German-Canadian farm-to-table chefs Michael and Nobuyo Stadtl盲nder and a French landscape artist as they create seven gardens in which they grow, cook, and serve seven-course meals for hundreds of people every night for 20 nights. The chefs use traditional growing methods and irrigate only by hand. Director Jonathon Staav says of Stadtl盲nder, 鈥淗e鈥檚 just this connection to our past where the things he does aren鈥檛 that different from what our grandmothers did when they emigrated here. They had a vegetable garden, and in the summer, that鈥檚 where produce came from,鈥 in a听Hollywood Reporter听.
: This 2013 documentary, directed by Jason Wise, gives viewers a听fascinating look into the secretive world of the Court of Master Sommeliers. Four candidates prepare to take the Master Sommelier Exam, a test so difficult that fewer than 200 candidates have attained Master level since its inception nearly 40 years ago. A follow-up documentary, 鈥淪omm: Into the Bottle,鈥 was released at the Napa Valley Film Festival in 2015.
: According to the 2016 film 鈥淯nbroken Ground,鈥 climate change and food systems are inextricably linked. This 25-minute documentary, produced by Patagonia Provisions, tells the story of leaders across the country using sustainable farming techniques that restore our natural environment, including regenerative agriculture, regenerative grazing, diversified crop development, and restorative fishing. 鈥淯nbroken Ground鈥 is now touring the country, with showings and panel discussions from New York to Hawaii.
: In the 2005 documentary 鈥淲e Feed the World,鈥 Austrian filmmaker Erwin Wagenhofer travels to find out where exactly his food comes from. Wagenhofer takes viewers to France, Spain, Romania, Switzerland, and Brazil while presenting the ironies of the world鈥檚 food systems. For example, Latin America produces much of Austria鈥檚 livestock feed, while a quarter of their own population starves. The film features interviews with Jean Ziegler, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, and Peter Brabeck, Chairman and CEO of Nestle International. 鈥淲e Feed the World鈥 illustrates the effects of globalization and industrial food production on the world鈥檚 food systems and highlights the global repercussions of hunger. 听
Food Tank would like to give a big shout out to the Toronto International Film Festival, which has featured some of the films mentioned above.
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