Monday, July 29, 2013

The Future of Food

Viewer: Brittany Collins

Stream for free: http://www.thefutureoffood.com/onlinevideo.html

About: 
Director: Deborah Koons Garcia | Producer: Catherine Butler and Koons Garcia
Produced: 2004 | Country: United States
Run time: 1:29:00 | Language: English

Synopsis: The Future Of Food offers an in-depth investigation into the disturbing truth behind the unlabeled, patented, genetically engineered foods that have quietly filled U.S. grocery store shelves for the past decade.

Opinion:

  • Starts off with background information about how the food system has changed over the past couple of centuries
  • Quickly transitions into how the Green Revolution became the Gene Revolution, setting the tone for a narrow focus on genetic engineering
  • Lots of anti-GMO, especially anti-Monsanto segments, as well as explanations of how companies have patented living organisms 
  • Interviews with farmers who have been sued by Monsanto for violating their patent
  • Big focus on biotech revolution
  • Mentions it is cheaper for Mexico to import corn from the U.S. than to grow its own because of U.S. subsidies
  • U.S. subsidizes crops, Europe subsidizes farmers, Canada and Mexico subsidize neither
  • University research can't challenge conventional wisdom (corporate control of genetic research)
  • Mentions dangers of multinational companies continuing to consolidate the food system
  • At around 1:10:00, states that world hunger is not about the amount of food (the people starving today used to be farmers themselves)
  • Talks about local food, CSAs at the end
  • Very heavily focused on issues of GMOs and patents
  • Does not focus so much on the future as the title would suggest
  • Much more problem-oriented than solution-oriented
  • Outdated (7 years old)
Recommendation:
  • Some segments may or may not be worth showing to Oxfam supporters
  • Would have to update such figures as "800 million malnourished" (to 925 million)
  • Not really the most appropriate film for Oxfam events
  • Appropriate audience
    • Easily understandable for anyone interested in the issues of GMOs and U.S. patents
    • Does not align with Oxfam/GROW

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