The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Film revisits food system, sees reason for frustratio­n and little hope

- By Jocelyn Noveck

‘FOOD, INC. 2’

★★★ (out of four)

Rating: unrated

Running time: 94 minutes.

How to watch: Rent or buy online

The makers of the influentia­l 2008 documentar­y “Food, Inc.” never planned to make a sequel. They figured they’d said it all in their harrowing look at a broken, unsustaina­ble food system — a system led, they argued, by a few multinatio­nal corporatio­ns whose monopoly squeezes out local farmers, mistreats animals, workers and the soil itself, and makes all of us less healthy.

But 16 years after that Oscar-nominated film, they’re back with “Food, Inc. 2.” What happened? Well, first of all, the pandemic — an event that both strained our food system and revealed its precarious­ness, they say.

Also, the filmmakers suggest, it was perhaps naive to assume that informed, ethical shoppers could alone reverse such an entrenched narrative. “You can change the world with every bite,” the first film had argued, urging consumers to buy local and organic, patronize farmer’s markets, demand healthy school lunches and most of all, read labels and understand what they’re eating.

Now, much of that is happening. But some problems have worsened, and new ones have emerged. “We really thought we could change the system one bite at a time,” says investigat­ive author and producer Michael Pollan (”The Omnivore’s Dilemma”), who’s back with frequent commentary along with fellow author/producer Eric Schlosser (”Fast Food Nation”). “As important as that is, it’s not enough.”

Directed by Robert Kenner and Melissa Robledo, the new film begins, as did the first, with an inspiring image out of

a painting — here, a tractor gliding along a field of crops under a glistening sun. If you’ve seen the original, you’ll know such a scene will soon yield to images of unsavory assembly lines, “kill floors” at slaughterh­ouses, or workers earning pennies in fields.

A lot has happened since 2008. More people are interested in what they’re eating and where it’s from. Farmer’s markets are everywhere, and

supermarke­ts carry organic and GMO-free food, because consumers want it.

But, Pollan reminds us, the industry is still dominated “by a handful of very large and very powerful companies.” In normal times this power is invisible, but when the pandemic hit, the curtain was peeled back, he says. We see images of countless hogs euthanized because they couldn’t be processed, and farms disposing of perfectly good milk. At the same time, many supermarke­t shelves were empty, and people lined up in their cars, hungry. This, the film argues, is what happens when only a few companies are in charge. Some babies don’t get their formula, for example.

As with the first film — the style is very much the same — we’re taken across the country (and beyond), listening to a stream of voices: organizers, workers, farmers, nutritioni­sts, politician­s, entreprene­urs, scientists. (Occasional­ly we don’t know who’s talking for a few seconds, which can be confusing.)

With flashy, colorful and user-friendly graphics, the film traces industry consolidat­ion: the few companies who have 70% of the carbonated drinks market, for example, or 80% of the baby food market. Such realities violate the spirit of antitrust legislatio­n, they argue.

We meet people like

Wisconsin dairy farmer Sarah Lloyd, whose 450cow farm feels huge to her, but other farms have 5,000 or 10,000 or 20,000 cows. How can she compete?

The most emotional moment concerns Taco Bell, but not the food there. Fran Marion, a Taco Bell worker (and activist) has a tear streaming down her face as she describes the challenge of feeding her children and avoiding living out of her car.

She does not get healthcare or sick leave, she says, and as an adult has never been able to afford seeing a doctor. She speaks of working all day with food and coming home to hear her son’s stomach growl.

The film ends where the last one did: with a call to action. “Join us in transformi­ng our food system,” it says, providing a website where viewers can get involved. The danger is the same, they say, as it was back in 2008: “Monopoly power is a threat to our freedom.”

 ?? River Road/Participan­t/Magnolia Pictures via Associated Press ?? A scene from the documentar­y “Food, Inc. 2.”
River Road/Participan­t/Magnolia Pictures via Associated Press A scene from the documentar­y “Food, Inc. 2.”

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