‘Food, Inc.’ offers 
plenty to chew on

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You put food in your mouth every day. But do you know exactly what you’re consuming when you pick up chicken breasts at the grocery store or drive though a fast-food restaurant for a cheeseburger?

Or do you even bother to care?

Probably not, director Robert Kenner says in his documentary “Food, Inc.” – and you should.

Kenner presents an even-tempered but nonetheless horrifying dissection of the U.S. food industry, where corporate-owned, mass-produced and chemically enhanced edibles can be unhealthy at best and deadly at worst.

One look inside a cramped, dusty chicken house – where the birds are so puffed up with antibiotics, they collapse under the weight of their breasts and die before they can be slaughtered – will make you think twice about how you spend your money at the supermarket.

Similar to Al Gore’s warnings about climate change in the Oscar-winning “An Inconvenient Truth,” Kenner’s findings – with significant contributions from authors Eric Schlosser (“Fast Food Nation”) and Michael Pollan (“The Omnivore’s Dilemma”) – produce a cumulative effect that’s depressing.

Baby chicks have their fuzzy heads slammed against equipment as they scoot along a conveyor belt.

Cows can catch and transmit E. coli from eating corn – the cheap mainstay of their diet, rather than the grass that’s more natural for their systems – and standing around in manure.

(Representatives from food industry behemoths like Tyson and Perdue wouldn’t speak to Kenner for his film.)

Stomach-turning as those images are, the individual stories of struggle are just as moving in their own way. One low-income family of four would like to eat well but they’re often too busy to cook and vegetables are too expensive to include in their meals regularly, so they order off the dollar menu of some burger chain instead – and it shows in their waistlines and the way they feel.

But the hardest story to watch is that of Barbara Kowalcyk, whose 2½-year-old son died of E. coli from a burger he ate during vacation. Kowalcyk is now an advocate for food safety, pushing to shut down plants that repeatedly produce contaminated meat.

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