Hartford Courant

‘We Feed People’ details Andres’ efforts to help people in crisis

- By Glenn Whipp On Disney+

Ron Howard’s absorbing new documentar­y about chef Jose Andres and his nonprofit relief organizati­on, World Central Kitchen, opens with Andres’ team navigating flooded roads to deliver food after 2018’s Hurricane Florence. Soon enough we’ll see him visiting Haiti after the devastatin­g 2010 earthquake, then Puerto Rico and the Bahamas in the wake of hurricanes as well as other locales after disasters and pandemics.

Andres moves around so much — and without much advance warning — that his daughters joined Twitter simply to “keep track of him” around the globe.

What makes Andres run? “We Feed People” doesn’t probe deeply for answers beyond making a convincing case that he has an insatiable passion for feeding hungry people and creating systems where they can take care of themselves in the wake of calamity. In this long era of ego-driven celebrity chefs, we’ve become wellacquai­nted with the idea that these people feel at home with chaos. Andres simply takes this ease with anarchy outside the kitchen as he and his organizati­on try to stamp out suffering.

The film, a National Geographic production now streaming on Disney+, is engaging and inspiring, outlining Andres’ journey from bestsellin­g cookbook author and tapas evangelist to a man whose wife has a backpack ready for him at all times so he can leave home at a moment’s notice. His “calling” began in 2010 when an earthquake hit Haiti while he was vacationin­g in the Cayman Islands. Seeing the images of destructio­n, he said, “Let’s go,” not so much to help, he says, but to learn.

Once there, Andres started making meals.

And he discovered that he had to listen and adapt to communitie­s in order to truly meet their needs and not just be a “white savior” but someone who values understand­ing above all else. World Central Kitchen was born from that trip, and it has been filling the gaps in government response to disasters ever since.

Howard’s movie comes from a clear place of love for the affable Andres, but it doesn’t turn him into a superhero. The film chronicles moments of exhaustion and frustratio­n, including an episode where he berates a World Central Kitchen volunteer who violated protocol in the Bahamas by feeding a hungry woman before relief stations had been establishe­d. Andres tries to right his mistake later but to no avail. Sometimes chaos gets the best of you.

“We Feed People” premiered in March at the SXSW Film Festival, just as World Central Kitchen workers were helping Ukrainian residents and refugees. That ongoing effort did not make it into the movie. And, of course, there will be more crises to come. It’s easy to give in to despair. What “We Feed People” makes clear is that you can help with a simple, small act of empathy.

How to watch:

 ?? SEBASTIAN LINDSTROM/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? Sam Bloch, director of emergency response for World Central Kitchen, left, and Jose Andres in the documentar­y “We Feed People.”
SEBASTIAN LINDSTROM/NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC Sam Bloch, director of emergency response for World Central Kitchen, left, and Jose Andres in the documentar­y “We Feed People.”

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