King Corn documentary opens tomorrow

Want to spend an hour and a half with corn, but don't want to eat anything or drive an ethanol-fueled car? Starting tomorrow, at least in New York, you can check out a new documentary film called King Corn. Two young men set about trying to grow corn in Iowa and take a look at just what's up with all this corn in America. The film doesn't get into ethanol (it focuses more on corn as food), but the film's upcoming release has given the media a chance to bring the biofuel into the debate. Earlier this week on the NPR show On Point, for example, ethanol made an apearance in a wide-ranging discussion that included the voice of Ian Cheney, one of the films writer/producers, and other corn/agriculture experts.
I expect quite a few of our readers will be interested in King Corn, as we can all agree that - even if the movie focuses its narrative elsewhere - corn is tied to ethanol like no other crop. The movie will continue limited screenings across America in the coming weeks, so check the website to see if it's playing near you.
[Source: King Corn website, On Point]
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Joyce Meyer 6:30AM (3/17/2008)
Calling these two 'experts' concerning anything related to agriculture is the equivalent of (or maybe even less accurate than) calling Paris Hilton an expert on farming and manual labor simply becuase she did The Simple Life. It would be nice if someone would actually do a relevant documentary for once. King Corn is NOT it.
Reply
lynne anderson 8:24PM (7/02/2008)
Really a life style changer, the investigation of corn in the American world! Interesting how the first to discredit what those who studied corn in our lives are from the corn industry! A parallel to this large factor in American lives is the pharmaceutical industry. Marketing, not research findings, changes our lives as Americans. My hope is that industry marketing affects intelligent people within America little in the future.
Reply