...it's unfortunate that the place of pride belongs to Spurlock's self-mortification.
Super Size Me (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:164
Fresh:152
Rotten:12
Average Rating:7.7/10
Consensus: Entertaining doc about the adverse effects of eating fast food.
Theatrical Release:10-09-2004
Synopsis: Why are Americans so fat? Find out in Super Size Me, a tongue in-cheek - and burger in hand -- look at the legal, financial and physical costs of America's hunger for fast food. Ominously, 37%... Why are Americans so fat? Find out in Super Size Me, a tongue in-cheek - and burger in hand -- look at the legal, financial and physical costs of America's hunger for fast food. Ominously, 37% of American children and adolescents are carrying too much fat and 2 out of every three adults are overweight or obese. Is it our fault for lacking self-control, or are the fast-food corporations to blame? Filmmaker Morgan Spurlock hit the road and interviewed experts in 20 U.S. cities, including Houston, the "Fattest City" in America. From Surgeon Generals to gym teachers, cooks to kids, lawmakers to legislators, these authorities shared their research, opinions and "gut feelings" on our ever-expanding girth. During the journey, Spurlock also put his own body on the line, living on nothing but McDonald's for an entire month with three simple rules: 1) No options: he could only eat what was available over the counter (water included!) 2) No supersizing unless offered 3) No excuses: he had to eat every item on the menu at least once It all adds up to a fat food bill, harrowing visits to the doctor, and compelling viewing for anyone who's ever wondered if man could live on fast food alone. The film explores the horror of school lunch programs, declining health and physical education classes, food addictions and the extreme measures people take to lose weight and regain their health. Super Size Me is a satirical jab in the stomach, overstuffed with fat and facts about the billion-dollar industry besieged by doctors, lawyers and nutritionists alike. "Would you like fries with that?" will never sound the same! [More]
Director: Morgan Spurlock
Director: Morgan Spurlock
Studio: Roadside Attractions/Samuel Goldwyn Films
Reviews for Super Size Me
Spurlock’s adventure in not-so-fine dining may be extreme, but it makes its point in a shocking way...
One of only a handful of select films that I can recall as being as important as it is entertaining.
Instead of making a calm, reasonable case, Spurlock dazzles us with sensational details. [But] most of his arguments are properly persuasive.
It goes several extra miles to interview nutritionists, educators and media experts about the epidemic of obesity.
The movie delivers loads of facts, food for thought and a heaping serving of laughs.
Every schoolchild should be brought to see it - with no popcorn during or burgers afterwards.
Super Size Me is, on one level, a cinematic stunt in the tradition of Michael Moore’s populist, anti-corporate crusades.
Spurlock has ventured what few social commentators bother with these days, especially in the burgeoning field of pop-documentary: the possibility for real change.
Afinal de contas, qual é o grande argumento de Spurlock? O de que comer sanduíches e batatas fritas em excesso provoca aumento de peso? Como diria Homer Simpson: 'Duh!'.
I'm less certain that super smug Spurlock is a man with a mission than I am resolutely convinced that he's a man out to draw attention to himself.
[Spurlock] presents some interesting, if non-shocking, facts about our addiction to fast food.
As entertaining as Super Size Me sometimes is, I'm not sure what Spurlock's escapade really accomplishes, except to emphasize that eating 5,000 calories a day, and exercising little, is bad for you.
Bet you don't head to the Golden Arches after seeing "Super Size Me."
Something like a public service announcement about a country-wide health problem that is presented with a comic edge.
Latest News for Super Size Me
May 09, 2008:
RT Interview: Morgan Spurlock on the Personal, the Political and Osama bin Laden
The documentarian comes over all Kandahar as we talk his latest, Where in the World is Osama bin Laden?. More...
December 06, 2007:
Freakonomics Headed to a Theater near You
Perhaps you've heard of Freakonomics, the bestselling book by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, and thought it sounded interesting, but never found out, on account of how... More...
December 20, 2005:
"Super Size" Guy to Take on "Science"
Morgan Spurlock, director of the hit documentary "Super Size Me," will soon turn his cameras towards a documentary adaptation of Chris Mooney's "The Republican... More...
September 09, 2005:
Spurlock Signs on to "Class Act"
Morgan Spurlock, who famously endured a month of eating nothing but burgers and fries and capturing his experience in the documentary "Super Size Me," is reuniting... More...
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