Films
All Jacked Up (2008) is based on four teenagers who realize their obsessive, addictive, and emotion-fueled eating habits are influenced by America’s detrimental cafeteria system.
Dirt! The Movie (2009) takes you inside the wonders of the soil. It tells the story of Earth's most valuable and underappreciated source of fertility, from its miraculous beginning to its crippling degradation.
Fast Food Nation (2006) traces the birth of an everyday, ordinary burger through a chain of riveting, interlocked human stories. It includes everything from what fast food corporations are hiding to the perilous work of meat-packing plants.
The Future of Food (2004) explores how genetically modified foods are infiltrating the American food system and impacting our planet.
Food Beware: The French Organic Revolution (2008) follows the story of the Bariac village in France where the town’s mayor has mandated an all-organic and mostly locally sourced menu for the school lunch programs.
Food, Inc. (2008) reveals surprising, and often shocking, truths about what we eat, how it’s produced, who we have become as a nation and where we are going from here.
Good Food (2006) is a collection of sixteen short films that explain how issues of free trade and sustainability affect the foods we consume and the world we inhabit.
King Corn: You Are What You Eat (2007) explores how the US’s fast food nation is dominated by the many forms of corn including corn meal, corn starch, and high fructose corn syrup among many others.
Lunch Line (2010) reframes the school lunch debate through an examination of the program’s surprising past, present, and possible future.
Sustainable Table (2007) takes a look into the food you eat, and how you can make a difference to your health and the environment by the food choices you make.
Two Angry Moms (2007) is the story of how two moms, outraged over the national child-health crisis, analyze how the schools cafeteria food has an impact on their child’s behavior, learning, and health.
Supersize Me (2004) follows director Morgan Spurlock’s 30 day McDonalds diet and portrays the huge health impacts of fast food.
We Feed the World (2005) provides insight on the production of our food and answers the question of what world hunger has to do with us, a film about scarcity amid plenty.