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Forks Over Knives is a 2011 American documentary film which argues that avoiding animal products and ultra-processed foods, and instead eating a whole-food, plant-based diet (whole grains, legumes, tubers, vegetables, and fruits), may serve as a form of chronic illness intervention.
Esselstyn appeared, along with his father and T. Colin Campbell, in the 2011 American documentary on whole foods, plant-based eating, Forks Over Knives. He later developed and starred in the follow-up documentary, Forks Over Knives Presents: The Engine 2 Kitchen Rescue with Rip Esselstyn. [21] [22]
Campbell is featured in the documentaries, Diet for a New America, [40] Forks Over Knives, [41] [42] Planeat, [43] [44] Vegucated, [45] and PlantPure Nation, [46] a film produced by Campbell's son, Nelson Campbell. [47] In 2024, Variety magazine reported that Oscar-winning director David S. Ward would direct a biopic about Campbell. [48]
Salman Rushdie will be the center of a new documentary from Alex Gibney, the Oscar-winning director behind “Taxi to the Dark Side” snd “Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief.”
In 2012, Amis and Cameron became vegan after watching the film Forks Over Knives. [15] [16] In 2014, Amis Cameron co-founded, with her husband, director James Cameron, and Craig McCaw, [17] Plant Power Task Force, an organization focused on showing the impact of animal agriculture on climate change and the environment. [18]
DOCUMENTARY “Hijack” star Idris Elba is set to front a new documentary for the BBC exploring the U.K.’s knife crime academic. “Idris Elba: A Year of Knife Crime” (working title) will see ...
In “It’s Never Over, Jeff Buckley,” Amy Berg’s rapturous documentary about Buckley’s extraordinary rise in the ’90s and his tragically cut-short life, we hear Buckley sing in every ...
PlantPure Nation features interviews with Dr. Michael Greger, Dr. Neal Barnard, and Professor T. Colin Campbell.It also follows Campbell's son, Nelson Campbell, as he attempts to establish a plant-based health initiative in Mebane, North Carolina, [1] after House Bill 550 failed to pass in the Kentucky House of Representatives.