Super Size Me poster
Movie

Super Size Me

2004·1h 40m·PG-13
Documentary
IMDb Rating
★ 7.2/10
115,232 votes
Metascore
73
Metacritic

While examining the influence of the fast food industry, Morgan Spurlock personally explores the consequences on his health of a diet of solely McDonald's food for one month.

Super Size Me is a 2004 documentary movie directed by Morgan Spurlock, starring Daryl Isaacs, Chemeeka Walker, Dania Abu-Rmaileh. It holds an IMDb rating of 7.2/10 from 115,232 votes and runs 1h 40m.

Actions open in the full BullseyeFlix app and jump to the exact feature.
🎬 Open in BullseyeFlix
Full details · Watch links · Similar movies

Director
Morgan Spurlock
Stars
Daryl Isaacs
Chemeeka Walker
Dania Abu-Rmaileh
Morgan Spurlock
Creators
Morgan Spurlock
Details
2004-06-11
100 min
Movie
PG-13
★ United States, Bulgaria
★ English
Keywords
capitalist nationasymmetrymcdonald's restaurantadvertisinghamburgerexperimentthree word titlefatfattening upconsumerismamerican foodvomitinganti competitive practicesautomation job losscontracthuman valueseconomybenefitfinancial speculationgluttonyeducation in capitalismcapitalist stateclimate crisisdebt trapindependent filmcapitalism driven inequalityhousing crisisfast foodcapital accumulationvomitcriticism of capitalismfood industryannual payacquisitionannual salaryanti competitivebusinessglobalizationveganentrepreneurmarketingjunk food storedividendsbase salarycrisis in capitalismjunk foodcapitalpaunchforcedbrandingjunk food shopdecent salaryautomationbubble in capitalismfirst partamerican kitchengetting hurtausterityunhealthyemployercommercializationcommodificationobesityclimate change2000seconomic stagnation in capitalismcrisisalienationfood addictionnauseanutritionhurting oneselfamerican culturebig corporationsbrainwashingdebtsugareconomic disempowermentfood and drink documentary21st centuryhurlingprocessed foodcapitalist bubbleagrarianismcapitalismineffective regulationdivision of labormasochismstomachacheblood testhistory of inequalityclass struggle in capitalismcapitalism driven povertymealannual wagesfast food restaurantovereatingeconomic policycorporate americacollapse