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Super engórdame

Título original: Super Size Me
  • 2004
  • B
  • 1h 40min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
116 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Morgan Spurlock in Super engórdame (2004)
Trailer 1
Reproducir trailer1:07
2 videos
99+ fotos
DocumentalDocumental sobre comida

Examinando la influencia de la industria de la comida rápida, Morgan Spurlock explora personalmente las consecuencias en su salud de una dieta de alimentos exclusivamente de McDonald's duran... Leer todoExaminando la influencia de la industria de la comida rápida, Morgan Spurlock explora personalmente las consecuencias en su salud de una dieta de alimentos exclusivamente de McDonald's durante un mes.Examinando la influencia de la industria de la comida rápida, Morgan Spurlock explora personalmente las consecuencias en su salud de una dieta de alimentos exclusivamente de McDonald's durante un mes.

  • Dirección
    • Morgan Spurlock
  • Guionista
    • Morgan Spurlock
  • Elenco
    • Morgan Spurlock
    • Daryl Isaacs
    • Chemeeka Walker
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.2/10
    116 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Morgan Spurlock
    • Guionista
      • Morgan Spurlock
    • Elenco
      • Morgan Spurlock
      • Daryl Isaacs
      • Chemeeka Walker
    • 456Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 138Opiniones de los críticos
    • 73Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
      • 7 premios ganados y 13 nominaciones en total

    Videos2

    Super Size Me
    Trailer 1:07
    Super Size Me
    Jimmy Hollywood
    Trailer 2:00
    Jimmy Hollywood
    Jimmy Hollywood
    Trailer 2:00
    Jimmy Hollywood

    Fotos116

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Morgan Spurlock
    Morgan Spurlock
    • Self
    Daryl Isaacs
    Daryl Isaacs
    • Self - Internal Medicine
    • (as Daryl M. Isaacs MD, Dr. Daryl Isaacs)
    Chemeeka Walker
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Dania Abu-Rmaileh
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Amanda Kearsan
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Christian Baucher
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Amelia Giancarlo
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Geoffrey Giancarlo
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Alexandria Morgan
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Chanelle Clarke
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Marisa Danenfield
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Katie Danenfield
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Megan Foley
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Edmand Cardero
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Jay Cohen
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Jonnae Strong
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Audrey Whitfield
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    Rachel Whitfield
    • Self - Kid of Camp Mt. Laurel
    • Dirección
      • Morgan Spurlock
    • Guionista
      • Morgan Spurlock
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios456

    7.2115.8K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7lawprof

    A National Epidemic Highlighted by a Dangerous Stunt

    Morgan Spurlock undoubtedly aspires to follow in the path of Errol Morris, Roger Moore, Joel Sucher and other leading documentarians. A young man with an adoring and beautiful girlfriend, he decided to unmask the evil of fast food and its impact on an increasingly obese America. That Americans eat too much fast food - too much of any kind of food - and eschew exercise is hardly news. But a full-scale documentary examining sloth by the bucket-full focusing on one major commercial phenomenon hasn't been done before.

    Spurlock decided to eat at McDonald's and only McDonald's for a full month. That's three meals a day with no other food source. Before launching on what actually was a death-defying trip (literally since for variety he consumed Mickey D's food in Texas, L.A. and a lot of other places) he had a full baseline workup with a cardiologist, a gastroenterologist and an internist who gets more screen time than his medical colleagues-he gravitates between being supportive and alarmist, the latter increasingly the right response to Spurlock's bizarre quest.

    Spurlock also has a nutritionist/dietician and a physical trainer to keep tabs on him. The only specialty missing, in retrospective one who might have been useful, was a psychiatrist. His girlfriend, a vegan chef no less, looks forward to the month with a mixture of humor and alarm.

    "Supersize Me" has lots of scientific information on the nature of fast food and its impact on an America that eats out more than it dines at home, a change from a past where mom or a wife faithfully prepared most meals. Nutritionists decry the change in our culture, educators point out the impact of fast food in school cafeterias on kids' health, a former Surgeon General gravely decries the menace and the usual person-on-the-street suspects shock viewers by their bumbling inability to define such terms as "calories." A food industry spokesman is blithely unaware that he is being set up to look like an ass. And, of course, there are multiple shots of Spurlock vainly connecting with polite drones at McDonald's HQ seeking an interview which never comes. Does this all sound familiar?

    Spurlock's month-long consumption of McDonald's products gets old fast although he and the director try to add some novelty like showing him vomiting after downing a supersized meal. Periodic visits to get his bloods and body checked reveal the insidious impact of a bizarre diet. His puzzled internist tells us several times he's never before seen a liver compromised by a high fat diet.

    The problem, though, is that Spurlock is like those laboratory rats who develop arcane tumors after consuming the equivalent of something that no human could ingest in ten lifetimes. His peregrination from one Mc D's to another becomes boring as his health is clearly threatened and he stubbornly refuses medical advice to give it up.

    The best part of "Supersize Me" is the well-presented information on schools and fast foods and how a few are resisting the commercial tide that aims junk at kids from kindergarten through high school. Even inmates, we're told, can be well fed at no greater cost than the fat-laden diets these essentially sedentary wards of the state have shoveled at them.

    Technically, this is a well-filmed documentary with creative use of multiple images and graphs.

    I hope Spurlock has more ideas for documentaries. He's had a lot of time to think about it-an epilogue informs us it took him almost a year to regain his former fitness and health thanks, partially, to his vegan lover's detoxification diet.

    Oh, and McDonald's is phasing out supersized meals, a minor withdrawal in a serious public health war.

    7/10.
    80rganism

    Exposing an epidemic

    "Supersize Me" is an original, humorous, disgusting, shocking, and -- overall -- scary film. Spurlock takes us on a whirlwind tour of the downfall of American health through poor nutrition, padding a lot of information with anecdotal footage of his own foray into a McDonald's-only diet.

    What amuses me about the negative "reviews" for this film at IMDb is how the majority of the naysayers focus on exactly one thing: Spurlock's 30-day McDonalds binge. Heck, you could pick that much out of the trailer, and write a slanted review based solely on the imperfections of that particular plot device as an overall impact study and call it a day. I wouldn't be a bit surprised to find out that's what's happening, either. Certainly, anyone who's watched the political BS pour in to commentary for Michael Moore's documentaries knows how it's done.

    However, if you actually take the time to watch the film, you'll see something quite different emerge: a pattern of childhood indoctrination, poor nutrition, inadequate exercise, and skyrocketing obesity rates, that's sweeping this nation like a plague. Spurlock's self-afflicted experiment is, as I've mentioned, a continuity device that unifies the broad range of the film within a single case study. In the total scope of what's addressed in this film, it's a relatively small part, and many decry it as unrealistic.

    But Spurlock never claimed it was entirely realistic! He says as much in the film: he ate as much McDonalds in a month as *nutritionists* recommend one eat in 8 years or more. However, the problem is, a lot of Americans are eating as much fast food in a year as he ate in a month. What is the net effect going to be after five years? After 10? Spurlock further restricts himself to an AVERAGE amount of walking exercise, typical for our national population. The problems he exhibits after 3 weeks on this diet are NOT unique, they are the ones that people around the country are exhibiting in spades: weight gain, fatty liver, depression, inactivity.

    It cannot be overemphasized that this condition is widespread. Those arguing "personal responsibility" have to answer the question of how it is that suddenly, over the last 30 years, so many people have "chosen" a life of sickness and self-destructive addiction over one of health and common sense. The effect of mass-media indoctrination is an obvious factor, and the film addresses it well. Spurlock also takes us behind the scenes at school lunchrooms and gymnasiums around the country, where we find out a little bit of what's been happening to the kids of America. Is the "french fry" truly the only vegetable we can afford to serve to school kids, aside from the dubious catsup? How children could be expected to show "personal responsibility" above and beyond that exhibited by their likely-obese parents in such an environment of brand franchising, 2nd-rate meal "programs", and cutbacks in PE/recess time is a matter that I invite all fast-food apologists at IMDb to explore.

    For pure entertainment value, I have to deduct points for an uneven pace (especially near the end) and insufficient exposition from some of the people in the film. Still, "Supersize Me" stands as an indictment of the prepackaged food industry, its marketing hype, and its congressional lobbyists. It also serves as a warning to Americans trapped in demanding low-activity jobs which leave little time for lunch or exercise: don't eat the fries!

    8/10
    7Ronin47

    Not a GREAT movie, but definitely a good and important one. (***)

    Fast food is good. I freely admit to running through fast food drive-thrus (Wendy's, Taco Bell and McDonald's being my top 3) often, sometimes several times a week. And I'm not the only one. I'm also one of the many millions of people in the country who are, uh...not thin. Think there's a connection?

    In "Super Size Me", a documentary from talented debut filmmaker Morgan Spurlock that manages to be both entertaining and horrifying, he attempts to draw a parallel between the fast food culture we live in and the rampant (and ever-increasing) rate of obesity in America.

    To do this, he launched into a little science experiment. A 33 year-old New Yorker in excellent health, he would eat nothing but McDonald's for an entire month, to gauge the effects on his body. Breakfast, lunch, and dinner at McDonald's and whenever they asked him to supersize, he would have to accept.

    Before starting, he consulted three doctors, a cardiologist, a gastroenterologist, and a general practitioner, all of whom said this experiment obviously wouldn't be GOOD for him, but that the damages would be minimal.

    Instead, the results were pretty shocking. Spurlock gained almost 30 pounds (over 10 in the first week), saw his cholesterol skyrocket, and experienced frequent nausea, chest pains, mood swings and loss of sex drive.

    During this month he also drove around the country, interviewing several different people on the topic (including a "Big Mac enthusiast" who has eaten over 19,000 Big Macs). His research on our fast food culture definitely yields some interesting information, especially when he interviews a group of 1st-graders, and more of them can identify Ronald McDonald than Jesus or George Washington.

    "Super Size Me" isn't perfect. It's a little repetitive and has a certain thinness to it (no pun intended!) that prevents it from being one of the truly great comedic documentaries of recent years like "American Movie" or "Bowling For Columbine".

    But even if it falls short of greatness, it's an entertaining and thought-provoking film (especially if you're, uh...not thin).

    Spurlock is a witty and engaging host (sort of like Michael Moore but not as much of a windbag), and I also liked his girlfriend (a vegan chef!) who looks on his experiment with a mixture of amusement, horror, and dismay. Just like we do.
    Nozze-Musica

    Super Size This!

    This is a landmark documentary I think every American should see Supersize me is an incredible chronicle of fast food and junk food in general in America. Morgan Spurlock is the documentation who is behind all of this. I knew McDonalds was bad for you, but I did not realize this bad, but aside from the McDonalds aspect of the film there is a lot of good information in here on how ingrained unhealthy food is in this country, the film is quite incredible. I knew that lobbyists and the like controlled much of the law making process. But I never knew how ingrained they were. The film is centered around an experiment by Morgan Spurlock. What he did was spend a month doing no exercising, and eat McDonalds for the entire month. The rule he had was he has to eat everything on the menu, and every time he was asked if he wanted it supersized he had to say yes. He enlisted the help of a number of different doctors, to look at his progress. Also in the film are various facts about the food industry in America, and various interviews, ranging from health food advocates to lobbyists for various restaurants and stores. Not only is the documentary very informative it is well produced. And in a time when obesity is an increasing crisis this movie is so important, it shows the problems that are out there, and how it sadly seems like these restaurants and stores want us to get fat, and sadly after watching this movie, you have to wonder if that's the case.

    A lot of people that are critical of this movie say that it is inaccurate. I disagree. I know a lot of people that are or were like him, I was. There was a time when I did little or no exercise, and I ate a lot of fast, or unhealthy food, food that was from McDonalds, or other bad food. A lot of America is like this, and this is a problem that needs to be corrected. There are stories in this film about people that were like him too. There are other facts about fast food that I can identify with, but I will not give it away as I do not want to spoil the film for anyone. Also a lot of people say why is it that he did not cover Taco Bell, Burger King, and other similar fast food restaurants. He said in later interviews that all fast food is as unhealthy as McDonalds. The reason it is so critical of McDonalds is because it is the largest and most recognizable fast food chain in the world. And in America the food is the most unhealthy compared to food served in other McDonalds restaurants around the world, and I know this from experience as well, haven eaten at McDonalds' in Germany, and what can I say? The food was actually good! What a surprise. McDonalds has by far the largest profit of any fast food chain, so the largest fast food company is definitely the most important. Even if you disagree with what the movie is trying to say, it is an interesting movie to watch.
    8ferguson-6

    McGurgle

    Greetings again from the darkness. My daughter and I have been anxiously awaiting the release of this film since first reading about it months ago. Director (and lab rat) Morgan Spurlock takes on a fast food exclusive diet for 30 days and fills us in on the painful steps and sickening conclusion. Many have attacked Spurlock for picking on McDonalds or for not selecting the healthiest thing possible at every meal. These people are missing the point. He explains in the movie that McDonalds is the selection because they so dominate the fast food scene in the world and especially in Manhattan (where he lives). He also explains his meal selection by showing that most McDonalds orders include burgers and fries. Personally, I wondered more about his numerous milk shakes and parfaits. These seem to be the items that were a bit extreme.

    For the most part, Spurlock does an excellent job proving that we eat too much fast food, that it is very harmful to our bodies, and that there is evil at work conditioning kids that fast food is real food. The most frightening part of the story was the school cafeteria segment showing how kids eat when parents are not around and when school administrators pay no attention. This is the crux of our problems. The Georgetown professor compared it to the early candy cigarettes that condition kids that cigarettes create happiness. The same can be said for fast food and its happy meals and playgrounds. I did not agree too much with the doctor's comparison of Spurlock to Nic Cage in "Leaving Las Vegas". Cage's character was trying to commit suicide, while Spurlock was running an experiment and even considered quitting when the doctors were begging him to. Overall, a nice documentary without the total disregard for decency and the truth shown by Michael Moore in most of his films. I believe this should be required viewing for all junior high and high school students, as well as all expecting parents. This could be an educational tool to convince people to put a little more effort into their health.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      The documentary premiered at Sundance in January, 2004. Less than two months later, McDonald's announced that it would no longer sell any of its menu items in "Super Size", although it officially denied that this move was in reaction to this film.
    • Errores
      Ray Kroc did not found McDonald's; the McDonald brothers did.
    • Citas

      [last lines]

      Morgan Spurlock: [voiceover] Still, the impact of this lawsuit is being seen far and wide. School districts in New York, Texas, and San Francisco have banned sugary soft drinks in schools. And all-natural healthy options are popping up everywhere. McDonald's joined right in, sponsoring events that showed how health-conscious they've become, and creating a new line of premium salads. At the same time, however, they also masterminded one of their fattest sandwiches to date: the McGriddle. A pancake-wrapped creation that won my heart in Texas, but can pack as much fat as a Big Mac, and have more sugar than a pack of McDonaldland cookies. In fact, their new premium ranch chicken salad with dressing delivers more calories than a Big Mac and 51 grams of fat, 79% of your daily fat intake. Over the course of my McDiet, I consumed 30 pounds of sugar from their food. That's a pound a day. On top of that, I also took in 12 pounds of fat. Now, I know what you're saying. You're saying nobody's supposed to eat this food three times a day. No wonder all this stuff happened to you. But the scary part is: there are people who eat this food regularly. Some people even eat it every day. So, while my experiment may have been a little extreme, it's not that crazy. But here is a crazy idea: Why not do away with your Super Size options? Who needs 42 ounces of Coke? A half pound of fries? And why not give me a choice besides french fries or french fries? That would be a great start. But why should these companies want to change? Their loyalty isn't to you, it's to the stockholders. The bottom line: They're a business, no matter what they say. And by selling you unhealthy food, they make millions. And no company wants to stop doing that. If this ever-growing paradigm is going to shift, it's up to you. But if you decide to keep living this way, go ahead. Over time, you may find yourself getting as sick as I did. And you may wind up here

      [emergency room]

      Morgan Spurlock: or here

      [cemetery]

      Morgan Spurlock: I guess the big question is, who do you want to see go first? You? Or them?

    • Créditos curiosos
      The last credit line reads: With VERY special thanks to my ex-wife's insurance provider for covering all medical costs. Thanks co-pay!
    • Versiones alternativas
      There are at least two (slightly) different versions of this film, depending on the source. Comparing the streaming versions available on Peacock, Tubi, Freevee and Pluto, for example, the quote from Ray Kroc at the beginning is attributed on Peacock ("McDonald's Founder), but not on the other three services (just says "Ray Kroc").
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Van Helsing/New York Minute/A Foreign Affair/Supersize Me (2004)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Shimmy She Wobble
      Performed by Otha Turner and the Afrossippi Allstars

      Written by Otha Turner

      Courtesy of Birdman Records

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    Preguntas Frecuentes19

    • How long is Super Size Me?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 11 de junio de 2004 (Estados Unidos)
    • Países de origen
      • Estados Unidos
      • Bulgaria
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Super Size Me
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Appleton, Wisconsin, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • The Con
      • Kathbur Pictures
      • Studio On Hudson
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 65,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 11,536,423
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 516,641
      • 9 may 2004
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 20,645,757
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 40min(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby SR
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.78 : 1

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