Magic Circle is pleased to host the Let's Retake Our Plate Film Series
during the month of April. Sink your teeth into a thought-provoking series of films that
uncover the real impact of what's on your fork.
Thursday, April 22 at 7:00 PM
Food, Inc.
In Food, Inc., filmmaker Robert Kenner lifts the veil on our nation's food industry,
exposing the highly mechanized underbelly that has been hidden from the American consumer with the
consent of our government's regulatory agencies, USDA and FDA. Our nation's food supply is now
controlled by a handful of corporations that often put profit ahead of consumer health, the livelihood
of the American farmer, the safety of workers and our own environment. (2008)
Friday, April 23 at 7:00 PM
What's on your Plate?
What's on your plate? is a witty and provocative documentary produced and directed
by award-winning Catherine Gund about kids and food politics. Filmed over the course of one year,
the film follows two eleven-year-old multi-racial city kids as they explore their place in the
food chain. Sadie and Safiyah take a close look at food systems in New York City and its
surrounding areas. With the camera as their companion, the girl guides talk to each other,
food activists, farmers, new friends, storekeepers, their families, and the viewer, in their
quest to understand what's on all of our plates. They visit the usual supermarkets, fast food
chains, and school lunchrooms. But they also check into innovative sustainable food system
practices by going to farms, greenmarkets, and community supported agriculture programs. They
discover that these programs both help struggling farmers to survive on the one hand and provide
affordable, locally-grown food to communities on the consumer end, especially to lower-income
urban families. (2009)
Saturday, April 24 at 7:00 PM
Fast Food Nation
Inspired by the incendiary bestseller that exposed the hidden facts behind America's fast
food industry comes a powerful drama that takes an eye-opening journey into the dark heart
of the All-American meal. Richard Linklater's Fast Food Nation traces the birth
of an everyday,
ordinary burger through a chain of riveting, interlocked human stories - from a hopeful,
young immigrant couple who cross the border to work in a perilous meat-packing plant,
to a teen clerk who dreams of life beyond the counter; to the corporate marketing whiz
who is shocked to discover that his latest burger invention - "The Big One" - is
literally full of manure. As the film traverses from pristine barbeque smoke labs to
the volatile U.S.-Mexican border, it unveils a provocative portrait of all the yearning,
ambition, corruption and hope that lies inside what America is biting into. (2006)