Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAfter discovering that their child has a life-altering sensitivity to synthetic dyes, parents and first-time filmmakers Brandon and Whitney Cawood are documenting their journey to unravel th... Ler tudoAfter discovering that their child has a life-altering sensitivity to synthetic dyes, parents and first-time filmmakers Brandon and Whitney Cawood are documenting their journey to unravel the impacts of synthetic dyes.After discovering that their child has a life-altering sensitivity to synthetic dyes, parents and first-time filmmakers Brandon and Whitney Cawood are documenting their journey to unravel the impacts of synthetic dyes.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Prêmios
- 1 indicação no total
Avaliações em destaque
Thankful cannot express how I feel that many people decided to create this film! I hope this film gets approved for Netflix, Hulu, and everywhere else because its message is vital! It is life or death that parents learn about how toxic these dyes are! I have first hand experience of watching my children lose their minds after Easter or Halloween candy, I wish I would have learned WHY sooner! It was the dye! I cannot tell you how many parent called me crazy when I eventually would deny my children foods or candies with dye, I wish they knew everything in this film! Cannot recommend this film enough!
As a european finance professional, my mind went to warren buffet watching this. Knowing some of his holdings in staple US pantry items, i can't understand the absolute disregard for the end customer. These chemicals are known to be harmful, and have been for decades, yet industrial lobbies are actively fighting to keep using them, knowing full well it's detrimental to the health of customers.
It's mind blowing to me, the level of carelessness and evil required as a company exec to go out of your way to fight to keep using cancer causing chemicals so your food can be brightly coloured. Insane.
It's mind blowing to me, the level of carelessness and evil required as a company exec to go out of your way to fight to keep using cancer causing chemicals so your food can be brightly coloured. Insane.
I work in video journalism and this film reminds me of a lot of projects by new filmmakers who feel passionately on a topic - emotional stories, interviews on one side of an argument, the making of the film itself used as a narrative device (it was your son that was interesting, not your being new to the craft), a lack of new or groundbreaking information / footage, and longer than necessary. Which is fine; most filmmakers - newcomers and veterans alike - will fall into these traps. It's so easy to do. What most people need to avoid these is an editor, which I couldn't feel in this project (and by "editor" I don't necessarily mean the person who holds the mouse and controls the editing software - I mean someone who will ruthlessly force the filmmakers to cut the fat, to get outside their comfort zones, to break new ground or to find new information, and ask the filmmakers to examine their own biases (counter arguments are actually *good* for the credibility of a project, but it can be hard for an advocate to realize this)).
The things I would've liked to have seen in this film: (1) discussion of the crackpot pseudoscience fringe who have attached themselves to this issue - has that hurt the cause? Give us a peek of the reality inside the movement. (2) An examination / explanation of how it can be that the FDA can ban something for external use but allow it for internal use. (3) Interviews with food industry folks: someone defending food dyes ("Americans want crazy-looking crap - what are we supposed to do??") and/or someone who worked in the food industry at the time these dyes were taking hold and can offer us a peek behind the curtain. It would be especially cool to hear from someone who developed these dyes and tried to make them safe for kids....but failed. And most of all, (4) someone at FDA - either *currently* as a whistleblower, or *formerly* as a "I can't believe I saw this go down"-type voice - who can provide either a smoking gun or provide info that shows how this is a profit-vs-people issue. I suppose the FDA interview could also be a humorous device when the person can't tell us why such toxic crap is allowed in our food. Oh and (5) less reliance on personal, tragic narratives. Some of this is absolutely needed, but such a huge issue that's been at-play for decades now should also have produced macro-sized data and big health trends that were missing from the film. Oh and (6), yeah, it doesn't look great that there are a bunch of 10-star reviews from first-time reviewers and the "rate this" score is around 6.
It also would've been really cool to see your wife confront a food executive; moms with kids who've been harmed have the moral high ground 100% of the time.
But kudos for getting a passion project into the form of a feature film. I hope it produces good things for your son. Much of the lighting and cinematography were really beautiful, and you found some very compelling personal stories.
The things I would've liked to have seen in this film: (1) discussion of the crackpot pseudoscience fringe who have attached themselves to this issue - has that hurt the cause? Give us a peek of the reality inside the movement. (2) An examination / explanation of how it can be that the FDA can ban something for external use but allow it for internal use. (3) Interviews with food industry folks: someone defending food dyes ("Americans want crazy-looking crap - what are we supposed to do??") and/or someone who worked in the food industry at the time these dyes were taking hold and can offer us a peek behind the curtain. It would be especially cool to hear from someone who developed these dyes and tried to make them safe for kids....but failed. And most of all, (4) someone at FDA - either *currently* as a whistleblower, or *formerly* as a "I can't believe I saw this go down"-type voice - who can provide either a smoking gun or provide info that shows how this is a profit-vs-people issue. I suppose the FDA interview could also be a humorous device when the person can't tell us why such toxic crap is allowed in our food. Oh and (5) less reliance on personal, tragic narratives. Some of this is absolutely needed, but such a huge issue that's been at-play for decades now should also have produced macro-sized data and big health trends that were missing from the film. Oh and (6), yeah, it doesn't look great that there are a bunch of 10-star reviews from first-time reviewers and the "rate this" score is around 6.
It also would've been really cool to see your wife confront a food executive; moms with kids who've been harmed have the moral high ground 100% of the time.
But kudos for getting a passion project into the form of a feature film. I hope it produces good things for your son. Much of the lighting and cinematography were really beautiful, and you found some very compelling personal stories.
This doc does a decent job of getting the info out there that there are artificial dyes that we should be aware of. It even starts naming them in the first few minutes and we also get a brief history of them and the FDA.
Then is somehow just stops and goes into story mode. One mother's story after another and dropping tid bits from academics and is mostly filler for the 94 minutes of running time.
You can easily skip through the stories and there is no data to back up anything. There is a blindfolded taste test which means nothing.
The bottom line is that other countries have banned some of these chemicals from food while the US has not. In the end it asks us to call/write politicians who are lobbied by the massive food companies, which has been mostly futile since the 1960's when some of these chemicals were created.
A poor documentary from a husband and wife team who are first time film makers.
The 50 reviews are all from 1 review accounts giving it 10 stars. If only the film makers put the same effort into making their film as they did creating fake profiles maybe this would have turned out better. 3/10 for the first 5 minutes. Nothing new after that.
Then is somehow just stops and goes into story mode. One mother's story after another and dropping tid bits from academics and is mostly filler for the 94 minutes of running time.
You can easily skip through the stories and there is no data to back up anything. There is a blindfolded taste test which means nothing.
The bottom line is that other countries have banned some of these chemicals from food while the US has not. In the end it asks us to call/write politicians who are lobbied by the massive food companies, which has been mostly futile since the 1960's when some of these chemicals were created.
A poor documentary from a husband and wife team who are first time film makers.
The 50 reviews are all from 1 review accounts giving it 10 stars. If only the film makers put the same effort into making their film as they did creating fake profiles maybe this would have turned out better. 3/10 for the first 5 minutes. Nothing new after that.
At this point I really dont understand parents who dont know how artifical food, drink, plastic, pesticides are changing not only kids but sterilise adults. And still in 2025 everybody are shocked how much adhd, autism, mental problems are among young... people wake up absolute everything today is poisining us, at this point only your own home grown food is exceptable and eatable... not only kids are more sick from food, they are more sensitive after all vaccines they get from birth... this is gonna be first generation that will live shorter than their parents and its all because of food, pesticides, vaccines, water, poisend air..
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesGeneral Mills and Mars were both product placements within this documentary.
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 24 min(84 min)
- Cor
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente