The Borneo Post

Documentar­y shows the dark origins of your sausage

- By Michael O’Sullivan

THERE are many disturbing phrases bandied about in “Eating Animals,” the Natalie Portman-narrated documentar­y about the morality of meat- eating, based on the 2009 non-fiction bestseller by Jonathan Safran Foer.

Some involve wonk- speak, such as “CAFO,” an acronym for “concentrat­ed animal feeding operation.” ( The name itself is less upsetting than the inhumane reality.) Others terms, such as “fecal marinade” — a reference to what one interview subject calls the Pepto-Bismolpink “hog lagoons” that dot the countrysid­e where pork is produced, and where lakes of animal waste bake in the sun — are simply disgusting.

That visceral reaction, I suspect, will not be an uncommon one to this provocativ­e — and ultimately persuasive—film, which aims to make viewers re- evaluate their relationsh­ip to carnivoris­m not merely by shocking, but by positing that there may be an ethical middle ground between vegan abolitioni­sm and the mindless scarfing-down of burgers from factory-farmed cows.

Reading sometimes portentous texts taken from Foer’s book, Portman, a vegan, is the main tour guide to this challengin­g excursion to the world of slaughterh­ouses and CAFOs, which one commentato­r likens to petri dishes for antibiotic-resistant bacteria. But it’s wordsmiths like that commentato­r and others who appear throughout the film( such as veterinari­an and animalwelf­are whistleblo­wer Jim Keen, who once worked at the US Meat Animal Research Center) that make the film’ s strongest and most eloquent points.

At once a history and critique of American farming, as well as a philosophi­cal examinatio­n of the potential for human kindness to trump our love of bacon, “Eating Animals,” at its core, poses two hard questions, the latter of which might seem intractabl­e: “How did we get here?” and “How do we go somewhere else?”

If you’re a barbecue lover with the stomach to see it, “Eating Animals” may not stop you from ordering the house special. But it could cause you to think twice about where those chicken wings — and those ribs, that brisket — came from.

Three stars. Unrated. Contains brief strong language and disturbing images of slaughterh­ouses and suffering animals. 94 minutes. — WP Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Frank R. Reese Jr. is the proprietor of Good Shepherd Poultry Ranch, where he raises chickens and turkeys humanely. — Courtesy of Sundance Selects
Frank R. Reese Jr. is the proprietor of Good Shepherd Poultry Ranch, where he raises chickens and turkeys humanely. — Courtesy of Sundance Selects

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