Last night I watched the documentary Killer at Large: Why Obesity is America’s Greatest Threat. Although I will give this film a slight thumbs-up, it has problems. Killer at Large tries to tackle every angle of the obesity story in 100 minutes. That is simply an impossible task.
Maybe the goal of the filmmaker was less to answer the question in the title, but to start many conversations on the topic. If that is the case, here goes mine.
Here is what I liked about Killer at Large.
- Brian Wansink author of Mindless Eating spends a few minutes discussing the psychology of eating. The information in Mindless Eating will do more to help the health of the individual than all that political nonsense. Taking personal responsibility is far more important than if your elected representative took campaign money from Big Food.
- Michael Pollan of Ominivore’s Dilemma and In Defense of Food explains the relationship between oil, pesticides, corn and obesity.
- Early in the film they did a quick cartoon showing pre-agricultural man hunting down an animal for food. The hunter was lean and athletic. He used strength and bursts of energy to acquire food. He didn’t jog to his prey, he sprinted. I wished they would have gone further with the evolutionary angle.
- The section on children having surgery to fix their obesity was shocking. That poor 12 year old girl. Did anyone else see that her mom was a Barbie and was winning the household battle for dad’s attention? So sad.
- Although it comprised too much of the film, I did find it interesting to learn about the marketing of junk food in the schools. The title of the film asks why obesity is the problem, not why marketing and politics are the problem. There are millions of kids that grow up today in amazing health that are exposed to the same marketing tricks as the obese kids.
Now let me list what this film failed to mention or got wrong.
- I never heard the word INSULIN once. INSULIN is everything when it comes to fat gain. It isn’t just the junk food that causes obesity, it is anything that causes insulin spikes. That includes grains, pasta, potatoes, juice, energy drinks and rice.
- Early in the movie they tried to imply that cortisol was the reason people were gaining weight. They then rattled off a list of things that cause stress and increased cortisol levels. Missing from that list was steady state aerobic exercise that so much of our society equates with leaning out. You will not lean out by jogging, you will just become a better jogger. All running does is increase your carbohydrate cravings, which causes your insulin to spike, which lowers your growth hormone levels and shuts off access to stored body fat.
- Weight training was not mentioned once as method to combat obesity. Shameful. Note: answering the phone with a dumbbell in one hand is not weight training.
- I only bring this up because the film started down the evolutionary path with that cartoon, but Intermittent Fasting was not mentioned. The biggest dietary lie going today is that missing a meal is the worst thing you can do for health and that it is catabolic. Nonsense. When you fast or miss a meal, your insulin levels drop, which allows your GH (growth hormone) levels to rise. GH is the repair hormone and it is also muscle sparing. During this time, the body can more efficiently use stored body fat for fuel.
- The political section. Our elected officials will make bad decisions. No kidding. I would have preferred you spent more time with Michael Pollan and Brian Wansink.
- The final section showed an entire town going on a diet. It implied two things that I disagree with. The first is that you need some coordinated society effort to lose weight. Nope, just personal responsibility. The second was the focus on exercise. Diet is 80% of the answer and that is where the overweight should be focusing the vast majority of their effort.
This movie is available for Netflix subscribers to watch online.



I’ll have to take a look at that film. What I already don’t understand is how they failed to link some of the obvious things with weight loss/management, like the importance of nutrition, weight training and interval training. This stuff is hardly groundbreaking info IMO. You have to wonder who they interviewed, for them to miss all of that…
They seemed to imply in the movie that removing the junk food and reducing calories was enough to cause fat loss. For children this is enough, but adults may already be showing signs of insulin resistance.
If fairness to them, they did only have 100 minutes. They bit off more than they could chew.
I was yelling at the lady who was the “anger mom” wanting the food industry to stop advertising to her kids and thereby undermining her authority. TURN OFF THE TV! Exersice your authority to TURN OFF THE TV! I think kids are easily manipulated, which is why my family does not watch TV. (For more reasons than advertising issues.)
I heard them say insulin when referencing adult onset diabetes. Just a correction.
I just watched the film. Ran across your posting while looking for more information about the documentary.
Annie is correct: Insulin is mentioned, repeatedly.
Robin, I am with you. Parental control can be as simple as turning off the tv. Frankly, the obesity epidemic and commercialism are two of the many reasons I do not even own a tv.
MAS, I wonder if you are missing the point. The point is stated very clearly: The obesity epidemic our nation faces is not one that can simply be “cured” by telling people to exercise more. It is a multifaceted issue, which requires a complex cure. This cure includes diet and exercise, but it also requires our government (which is supposed to protect and care for its people) to not simply listen to money, and our nation’s people to wake up and demand change. (This is the reason the film takes on such a “Large” topic is such a “Large” way.)
Personal responsibility (such as exercise and diet modification) is an important key to not becoming obese, but tell me how that such a simple argument is going to sway the poor, the average American who only reads at a sixth grade level, the single parent who knows this but is forced to work two jobs, or children (who cannot even tell the difference between programming and commercials) when every other facet of the Average American lifestyle is screaming something different at them.
Further, as the film points out, if way too many of today’s youth are fat and diabetic, where will our future military, police, firemen, EMTs come from. Truly, the obesity epidemic effects us all.
Thank you.
@Heather – Maybe I’ll watch it again. I did give it slight thumbs up, but I’ve seen a lot of health and nutrition stuff in the past 2 years and I didn’t think this was one of the better films.
How do you connect to children and the poor when the governments own recommendations actually promote further obesity? I wish I knew.