A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #
 
TOP DOWNLOADS
In Bruges
year: 2008
The Bank Job
year: 2008
Cloverfield
year: 2008
Rambo
year: 2008
Definitely Maybe
year: undefined
Horton Hears a Who
year: 2008
Be Kind Rewind
year: 2008
The Forbidden Kingdom
year: 2008
The Spiderwick Chronicles
year: 2008
Vantage Point
year: 2008
Download Movie
Fast Food Nation
Genre : 
Comedy Drama, Americana, Ensemble Film.
Year : 
2006
Director : 
Richard Linklater.
Actors : 
Patricia Arquette, Bobby Cannavale, Paul Dano, Luis Guzman, Ethan Hawke, Ashley Johnson, Greg Kinnear, Kris Kristofferson, Avril Lavigne, Esai Morales, Catalina Sandino Moreno, Lou Taylor Pucci, Ana Claudia Talancón, Wilmer Valderrama, Bruce Willis, Michael Conway, Francisco Rosales, Dana Wheeler-Nicholson, Roger Cudney, Glen Powell Jr., Cherami Leigh, Juan Carlos Serrán, Yareli Arizmendi, Matt Hensarling, Mileidy Moron Marchant, Dakota Edwards, Raquel Gavia, Hugo Perez, Ellar Salmon, Helen Merino, Erinn Allison, Barbara Chisholm, Larizza Salcido Gameros, Lana Dieterich, John Scott Horton, Mitch Baker, Aaron Himelstein, Frank Ertl, Marco Perella, Armando Hernandez, Monica Cano Mascorro, Carlos Adrian Romero Ayala, Humberto E. Velez Sanchez, Cora Cardona.
   
File information:
Runtime:
106:00
Codec:
dvd-rip
Size:
715.28 Mb
Storyline:

Inspired by author Eric Schlosser's New York Times best-seller of the same name, director Richard Linklater's ensemble drama examines the health issues and social consequences of America's love affair with fast food and features an all-star cast that includes Greg Kinnear, Ethan Hawke, Kris Kristofferson, Patricia Arquette, and Luis Guzman. Mickey's is the most popular fast-food chain in America, and The Big One is the top-selling burger that put them on the map. When the higher-ups at Mickey's corporate offices learn that the frozen meat patties used to make the wildly popular burger have somehow been tainted with contaminated meat, they send marketing executive Don Henderson (Kinnear) on an urgent mission to ensure quality control and find out precisely how their product became compromised. It's a long way from the Southern California boardroom to the immigrant slaughterhouses, though, and the further Henderson works his way through the bustling feedlots and toward the ubiquitous restaurant sites that have become a staple of modern culture, the more he begins to realize just how dangerous convenience can become when it leads to blissfully ignorant complacency.