Some industrial practices are constructed as cruel in Hugo Latulippe’s Bacon: The Film through scenes of distressed piglets, which become portraits of infants taken by force from parents. These changing practices in industrial hog farms around Quebec are contrasted with pastoral scenes around the farm. But these scenes are devoid of farm animals, and shots outside slaughterhouses and images of hogs as food suggest there was no place for connections in this hyper-industrialized era.
The message in Animals is ambiguous, then, but still points to the need to realize our meat comes from sentient beings. Despite their rhetorical weaknesses, these films articulate similar arguments against factory farming, as do popular U.S. food films such as Food, Inc. and King Corn, and European films such as We Feed the World and Our Daily Bread.
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