Acensbart
Excellent but underrated film
Kaydan Christian
A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.
Cassandra
Story: It's very simple but honestly that is fine.
bmurphyi
Movie does a great job of exposing how evil our corporations are. I now know why after 50 years I get bumps on me when I eat wheat. It started at the time roundup was put on wheat. What a coincidence. We are being poisoned for profit. The rest of the world has awaken to the GMO craze of our corporations, when will the American people take their country back? The movie seem very real from all the stories I have heard from doctors and farmers through the years. Companies have become cancers on us. WE are in a war for survival. This movie shows that. People who give it a negative review are either brainwashed or work for the company.
syedareshma
Wow, It was such an amazing and eye opening movie. After watching the movie, I cringed at the food we are eating.. I still don't understand how such an awesome movie can have 4.5/10 on IMDb.. May be Monstanto's GMO cops onto you too? To mislead people into not watching this movie? I think everyone should boycott GMO foods. That is the only way I see GMO companies go out of business. Or else they will keep screwing with all the organic food farmers until there is no trace of organic food left. I read a couple of food blogs also complaining that the movie has false information. But if 75% of the information shown in the movie translates to facts in our life, then you know you cannot doubt the rest of 25% too right? Probably GMO cops trying to discourage people from watching the movie by giving it bad reviews?
ELizabeth Ali
Has anyone noticed that movies are becoming more and more "transparent "about whats really going on in the world? I've been aware about GMO's for about 15 years now and was surprised to find this movie to be very accurate about how conglomerates like Monsanto work. Every topic covered in this movie from the farmers in India to the "terminator seeds" (pattening life), the lobbying, and non- independent studies--all of it is actually true, and if you don't "think so" do some of your own research/"connecting dots". Ask yourself when did cancer become the norm? When did so much disease become the norm? They did leave one huge "dot" out however and that is the why? Whomever made this movie decided the population isn't ready for that truth yet, but this can easily be figured out if you do the research.
iskoggard
An overly dramatic but well-produced and well-acted thriller that lumps together in one narrative all the concerns, mostly legitimate, that many consumers have about GMOs. It is no wonder that a powerful, paternalistic industry that cloaks itself in secrecy would give rise to such paranoiac visions of our food system. The film touches all the emotional buttons involving the struggle of the powerless individual citizen against the all powerful mega-corporation: the single mother of a sick child, a poor organic farmer, the young idealistic immigrant post-doc; their stories interwoven along with bad guys to boot: the nasty corporate general counsel and GMO cops. While the movie is highly entertaining, I would recommend also seeing the documentaries "Genetic Roulette" and "GMO OMG," which are more informative about the issues. Nevertheless this is a good starting point for those not familiar with GMOs and trying to understand why so many people are against them. It does give an insight into the passions behind the anti-GMO movement, which is not going to go away anytime soon.