Focus Features has been asking people in the food community for five recommendations of films they particularly like.   Here are my picks:
Folks From the Food Movement on Sustainable Cinema: Marion Nestle
By administrator November 19, 2010

Marion Nestle: I would not pick Thanksgiving as the  optimal time to watch films about food  production systems but I’ve  chosen films—documentaries and not—that tell  stories worth watching for  their entertainment value as well as for their more  serious messages.

1. |Super Size Me
I have to begin with this one because it’s my screen debut!   I appear in it for ten seconds as a talking head defining calories,  among other things. This is Morgan Spurlock’s account of a month-long  experiment eating nothing else but food from McDonald’s. Spurlock’s  depiction of his 25-pound weight gain is not only a commentary on the  role of fast food in America’s obesity epidemic, but also a fast-moving  and riveting examination of the corporate side of our country’s love  affair with burgers and fries.

2. |King Corn
It’s hard to imagine that a story about how two guys grow  corn on one acre in Iowa could be so utterly delightful, but Ian Cheney  and Curt Ellis have a sense of humor along with plenty of imaginative  smarts. This is the best place to see how industrial farming really  works. Spoiler alert: I love the scenes in which they start with corn  and cook up a batch of high fructose corn syrup, take two minutes to  plant their acre, and discover that their acre is eligible for corn  subsidies. This film may be a documentary about corn production and  harvesting, but it is a pleasure to sit through again and again.

3. |Food, Inc.
This is the most commercially successful of the recent  documentaries exposing the evils of the industrial food system, and for  good reason. Starting with the splendid opening credits, it is  wonderfully directed (by Robbie Kenner) and narrated by food movement  superstars, Michael Pollan and Eric Schlosser. Even for people who know  something about industrial food production, the film breaks new ground.  For me, the most moving episode was the 4:00 a.m. immigration raid on  hapless Mexican workers at a Smithfield packing plant. The film tells  stories ranging from the infuriating (seed patenting) to the  heartbreaking (the lethal effects of toxic E. coli on a small child).  Best, it is a rousing call to action. Join the food movement!

4. |Tampopo
Who knew that the Japanese made spaghetti Westerns? As it  happens, they do or at least used to. A lone cowboy rides into town and  teaches a young woman how to cook noodles so delicious that customers  line up to eat them. The message?  It takes hard work to develop real  cooking skills but the results are worth it. The hero may ride off into  the sunset, but this film carries its lessons lightly and is marvelous  cross-cultural fun.

5. |La Grande Bouffe and Ratatouille
I can’t decide between these two films for my number five. La Grande Bouffe (The Great Binge,  in my translation) is a French film of the 1970s that doesn’t seem to  show up in food film festivals. It deserves a revival, not least for its  splendid cast: Marcello Mastroianni, Philippe Noiret, and Ugo Tognazzi,  among others. As I recall, the guys spend a weekend gorging on food and  sex, giving entirely new meaning to the pleasure of food in general,  and to fruit tarts in particular.
Ratatouille is, of course, about a cartoon mouse who yearns  to become a chef, and does so with great panache. The film is  surprisingly faithful to the day-to-day reality (OK, exaggerated) of  professional kitchens, and the extraordinary amount of teamwork involved  in producing superb restaurant food. It may not make anyone want to  become a chef, but it gives plenty of insight into what it takes to do  so.