Released 2004

Since its release in 2004, The Future of Food has screened in film festivals, theaters, schools, conferences, community centers, libraries, grocery stores, barns and living rooms around the world.

The Future of Food has been a key tool in the American and international anti-GMO grassroots activist movements and played widely in the environmental and activist circuits since its release in 2004. The film is widely acknowledged for its role in educating voters and the subsequent success of passing Measure H in Mendocino County, California, one of the first local initiatives in the country to ban the planting of GMO crops. Indicative of its popularity, the Future of Food showed to a sold out audience of 1,500 at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco in 2004, a benefit for Slow Food, where it was introduced by Alice Waters.

The Future of Food has been a key tool in the American and international anti-GMO grassroots activist movements and played widely in the environmental and activist circuits since its release in 2004. The film is widely acknowledged for its role in educating voters and the subsequent success of passing Measure H in Mendocino County, California, one of the first local initiatives in the country to ban the planting of GMO crops. Indicative of its popularity, the Future of Food showed to a sold out audience of 1,500 at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco in 2004, a benefit for Slow Food, where it was introduced by Alice Waters.

[button_link url=”http://thefutureoffood.com/index.html” background=”#98CC66″ target=”blank”  icon= “icon-film”  title=”The Future of Food” onclick=””]Visit Future of Food – a documentary[/button_link]

 

Published On: 23 May, 2004Categories: NewsTags: