November 17, 2006
MOVIE REVIEW | 'FAST FOOD NATION'
The Ties That Bind America's Food Chain
By A. O. SCOTT
NYT

If you go to see "Fast Food Nation" with a group of friends, there is
a good chance that someone — the smart-alecky contrarian; there's one
in every crowd — will bring up the subject of spinach.

Early in the film a fast-food executive named Don Anderson (Greg
Kinnear) is dispatched to Colorado to investigate reports of E. coli
bacteria — "fecal coloform counts off the charts!" — in his company's
beef supply. Since the movie, adapted by Richard Linklater and Eric
Schlosser from Mr. Schlosser's best-selling investigation of the
industrial food chain and directed by Mr. Linklater, dwells on
conditions in the feed lots and slaughterhouses where future
hamburgers live and die, it can plausibly, if a bit glibly, be
interpreted as a brief for vegetarianism.

Hence the impulse to point out that contaminated leafy greens have
recently sickened more people than dirty meat. So there. A similar
response was evident last spring in Cannes, where several American
journalists bragged (or at least joked) about heading for the local
McDonald's after the "Fast Food Nation" screening, as if to prove they
had resisted its lessons.

"Most people don't like to be told what's best for them," says Bruce
Willis in a sly, brilliant, single-scene cameo, and the suspicion that
the movie is doing just that may provoke some reflexive resistance.

Which is too bad, because "Fast Food Nation," while it does not shy
away from making arguments and advancing a clear point of view, is far
too rich and complicated to be understood as a simple, high-minded
polemic. It is didactic, yes, but it's also dialectical. While the
climactic images of slaughter and butchery — filmed in an actual
abattoir — may seem intended to spoil your appetite, Mr. Linklater and
Mr. Schlosser have really undertaken a much deeper and more
comprehensive critique of contemporary American life.

If it's true that we are what we eat, then how, this film asks, do we
even know who we are? The writer William S. Burroughs once
contemplated "a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of
every fork," and "Fast Food Nation" aims to produce a similar moment —
to shock, to demystify and to force a kind of horrified, questioning
clarity.

In what has become the preferred cinematic method for addressing
complex social issues — see also "Crash," "Traffic" and "Babel," among
others — Mr. Linklater's film tells multiple stories, which radiate
like spokes from the hub of a central theme. Don Anderson pokes around
in fictional Cody, Colo., trying to balance his search for the truth
with an apparent desire not to do anything that might hurt his career.

Meanwhile, a group of Mexican immigrants, having crossed the border
illegally, arrives in Cody (Don unknowingly drives by the van
transporting them) and takes up dangerous, stomach-turning jobs at the
meat-processing plant. And a teenage burger-slinger (who works at one
of Don's franchises after school) undergoes a crisis of conscience
when she falls in with a group of anticorporate activists from a
nearby college.

Mr. Linklater is a nimble and versatile director, but what he does
best — what he seems to like most — is to film people in conversation.
His most characteristic movies — "Slacker," "Before Sunset," "Waking
Life" — consist largely of unfettered, idiosyncratic talk, and "Fast
Food Nation" is thick with debate, argument, rumination and repartee.
Curiously enough, the talkiness is what saves the movie from turning
into a lecture. Its loose, digressive rhythm keeps it tethered to
reality, while the dialogue and the easy pace of the scenes allow the
characters to register as individuals, not just as types.

It helps that the performances are generally strong. Mr. Kinnear is,
yet again, the All-American dad and solid citizen, at once a paragon
and a parody, thoroughly decent and just a bit sleazy. Ashley Johnson
is completely convincing as Amber, the striving high school student
whose idealism is the flip side of her ambition. The only thing Amber
wants more than to change the world is to get out of Cody, and one of
the film's quiet insights is that these two desires — to fight the
system and to win by its rules — are not necessarily incompatible,
though they may seem contradictory.

In other words, when Amber and her newfound comrades sit around the
dorm debating strategy and raging against the machine, they are
attacking one version of the American dream while embodying another. A
more basic instance of that dream motivates Raul (Wilmer Valderrama)
and Sylvia (Catalina Sandino Moreno), a young married couple who have
crossed the American-Mexican border on foot. While both actors are
natural magnets for the sympathy of the audience, Mr. Linklater and
Mr. Schlosser resist the impulse to turn them into caricatures of the
noble, suffering poor. They are too interesting to be pitiable, just
as Bobby Cannavale, as the predatory supervisor at the meat-packing
plant, is more than just the sum of his ruthless, despicable actions.

The cast is large — there's Ethan Hawke! And Kris Kristofferson! — but
the crowdedness of "Fast Food Nation" is evidence of its liveliness.
(Paul Dano, as one of Amber's coworkers, and Ana Claudia Talancón, as
Sylvia's wayward sister, deserve special mention.) Everyone in it has
something to say, and the central characters face some hard ethical
choices set down by the logic of 21st-century consumer capitalism.

The movie does not neglect the mute, helpless suffering of the cows,
but it also acknowledges the status anxiety of the managerial class,
the aspirations of the working poor (legal and otherwise) and the
frustrations of the dreaming young. It's a mirror and a portrait, and
a movie as necessary and nourishing as your next meal.

"Fast Food Nation" is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent
or adult guardian). It has scenes of sex, violence, drug use and
animal slaughter.

FAST FOOD NATION

Opens today nationwide. 


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