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The End of Meat - Eine Welt ohne Fleisch

3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars 164 ratings
IMDb6.5/10.0

$24.07
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Product details

  • Aspect Ratio ‏ : ‎ 2.35:1
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.47 x 0.67 x 7.68 inches; 4.44 ounces
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ German, English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese
  • Language ‏ : ‎ German (Stereo), English (Stereo)
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B075DVZWK6
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars 164 ratings

Customer reviews

3.7 out of 5 stars
3.7 out of 5
164 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2019
Some reviewers said that the film was boring. I'm not sure why they would expect a film about food and social change to be 'exciting'. I read reviews that talked about it being wrong to genetically create meat. As a vegan, I would never eat genetically created meat, but I have family and friends that will never give up meat. They are the market for this product and lets face it, meat is SO bad for a person that if they are going to eat bad food no matter what, why not eat something that does not harm animals and eliminates all the environmental devastation that the meat industry is creating. I agree with the closing statement in the film, that in the future, when the world looks back, they will see us as barbarik in the extreme for how we treated animals. I liked the message of the film a lot. I thank those that created this film for their research and talent and their willingness to share this message.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 4, 2018
Why are view points always so extreme? I have respect for Vegans if their decision is based on moral and Spiritual ones. I do not think I could ever convince them to eat meat. Why would I? It is free will. I get it, I love fresh home grown fruits and vegetables of all kinds! YUM! I also love grass fed home grown, meat, and eggs.
What confuses me is the people that decide eating meet is wrong because they saw a video somewhere or they think all animals are abused that are used for food.
It simply is not true and this movie helped that idea. It did not give any viable alternatives to eating meat. The viewpoint was given that somehow cells taken from a bovine and grown them in a lab is a good alternative. The other was a cheese like food that the person in a lab coat and safety glasses touted this food was not GMO and that is was "natural" He seemed to barely keep a straight face saying this.
Healthy food is not grown in a lab. Period.
The other food is Dulse. Also grown in big vats which looked like it took of a lot electricity to run. They said it tasted like bacon, but healthier. They did not say what it was cooked in but it was deep fried.
A Doctor in the movie also talked about how unhealthy people are eating meat...cancer etc. He also talked about the diets high in sugar etc. Yes. that is called a fast food diet. Do people still not realize that is unhealthy?
There was much talk about row crops and deforestation and methane gas, cattle are harming the planet etc.
What is so upsetting is they never talked about alternatives. It was an extreme viewpoint. The point was stop eating meat and we will live happily ever after.
What about grass fed? What about raising animals trying to mimic nature? Having cattle out on grass moving them daily, never being confined or abused. Chickens that come in behind and eat the bugs and larvae for fly control. Those chickens then give us healthy, delicious eggs
As I sit here and type this I literally see my chickens truly roaming free doing what they do best, foraging, sifting through hay looking for seeds, out in the snow covered grass doing the same thing. The can at their free will go in a coop with a heat lamp, and a heated waterer eating corn and other grains to make up for the rest of their diet. Doing so they scratch and spread manure, etc throughout cleaning up things, and they give me wonderful eggs. It is how nature made them!
Why wouldn't I eat the eggs? If there is not a rooster around the eggs never get fertilized. They eggs would just eventually rot. Why wouldn't I eat the eggs? Chickens lay eggs. It is what they do.
Back to the movie, There was a man bragging about how they took grazing cattle of this site and said how much grass and willows have come back since then. (since the 1990's by the way). The before picture showed grass that was overgrazed way too short and brown, I would be embarrassed and ashamed if I ever let my grass get that way. It is not the fault of the cattle, it is mismanagement!
This man went on to say now this land can be "converted to more natural uses" . He did not say what those uses were! I saw no vegetables being grown. He just bragged about the willows coming back.
I love trees but Willows can be a huge problems around waterways causing erosion.
I thought to myself more natural uses like when 60 Million buffalo existed eating grass, trampling grass, manure, and urine into the soil for the microbes, and worms to regenerate the land? Yes, that would be nice!
I could go on and on with all the extreme, viewpoints in this movie, posing all these problems, but never giving any other view points.
The India segment was confusing. They are a land of Vegans, almost to the point of worship to cattle, yet, there is hungry, and dead cattle in the streets. I was confused to the point of that. One man even stated that people have an almost "mild indifference towards animals" How sad of a statement. I thought about the saying "the opposite of love is not hate, it is indifference" It really showed that in that segment.
Please understand there is a growing movement of farmers and ranchers like me out there that love animals. That try to mimic nature in raising them. We love and care for the land, and the environment, so that it can take care of the animals to raise them in a healthy happy way. We look to have animals not just survive but to thrive. We put our animals first. We have animals because we love them, and love the land. I know that sounds impossible to some people because we eventually sell them or have them butchered. We do so in the most honorable way we know how. My last steer (male bovine that had been castrated) spent his whole life here on the grass and hay and then was quietly loaded and trucked comfortably 5 miles to the butcher where he was patiently was off loaded. It is not like what you see in those horrific videos. It is over very quickly. He never made a sound or showed signed any signs of stress the whole trip. How do I know this? It is because I know my animals. They are my passion. It was not easy, nor I hope it ever is. I do not take taking a life lightly.
Think of it as what they showed in the movie as a "sanctuary" places to have the animals. That is how people like me raise them, only we harvest them for food someday. The animals do not know this, we do not treat them differently because of this
Please understand you have choices. Do not rely on some government to change a law. Go find someone that has passion raising animals, that will let you come visit the place ( I know I would) and spend your dollars there.
Look up Food inc, Joel Salatin, Gabe Brown, etc.
43 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2018
Gently but firmly presents many reasons to reduce meat consumption, and has a good shot of appealing to people that otherwise would never consider doing so. I have been what the film calls "flexitarian" ever since I gave up beef (following Leonardo DiCaprio's documentary on climate change), and have reduced my consumption of other meats over time since then. Although this film is unlikely to make me immediately go vegetarian, I will likely recommend it to close relatives.

One thing I was slightly disappointed about was a lack of addressing health concerns of abandoning meat, to give people more confidence in switching over. Currently, there are no natural plant sources of vitamin B12, and I take yeast-grown B12 supplements to accompany my low-meat diet, and it is to my knowledge that I would otherwise quickly become B12 deficient.
15 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2018
I had to switch to a vegan diet for health reasons and only began looking into the ethical side of veganism over the last few years. We've all seen photos and videos from slaughter houses, but it didn't really have an impact on me until I realized the actual damage eating meat does to our bodies and the environment. There is new information in this film that I had not found, yet. I read a few of the negative reviews. Had they watched all the way through, they would have seen that even meat eaters are trying to prevent mass murders of animals while still creating non-vegan meat, dairy and eggs. Maybe they wouldn't have seen the film as propaganda.
27 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on July 5, 2019
It does a very good job examining what's happening now, what current options are available, and where we may be someday. There have been some reviews that have suggested that it is too extreme. I don't see that. I wonder if folks are reacting more to their feelings about what it takes to provide meat as food than the movie itself.

There is a hope presented by that movie that we will all take the time to think deeply about what we are doing and why.
Reviewed in the United States on September 7, 2018
I like that they didn't have brutality or animals being harmed in this. It's an eye opening look at how much better off the world would be without meat. Very informative and moving when you see things from a different perspective. We are so conditioned that animals are food, and they really aren't. The hit on the environment is more than car, planes and factories combined. Definitely recommend.
4 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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Nessie
5.0 out of 5 stars Richtig gut
Reviewed in Germany on April 6, 2018
Ein Film, der auch mal die ethischen Seiten in den Vordergrund rückt, nicht "nur" das Tierwohl, Umweltschutz, und Gesundheit. Ich denke zwar dass "Cowspiracy", "What the Health", "Earthlings" oder "Gabel statt Skalpell" immer noch die Favoriten sind, aber für die Ethik ist dieser Film ein Muss.

Einzigartig sind die neuen Methoden, die vorgestellt werden (z.B. über veganen Käse), dies hat keiner der anderen Filme. Von daher sehr zu empfehlen, aber auch wegen anderen Punkten.

Ich persönlich musste nicht davon überzeugt werden, dass Tiere genau wie "menschliche Tiere" ein Recht auf Leben haben, aber es war schön, die Ideen von anderen Idealisten zu hören :-)
10 people found this helpful
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Arce
5.0 out of 5 stars Ein Muss.
Reviewed in Germany on April 30, 2019
Viele gute Denkanstöße. Sollte man gesehen haben und über unser Verhalten nachdenken............
Werner Fries
5.0 out of 5 stars Pflichtfilm
Reviewed in Germany on May 1, 2019
Dieser Film gehört zur Pflichtlektüre. Wann werden wir endlich menschlich?
2 people found this helpful
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Lyn
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 10, 2018
Thought provoking documentary which I enjoyed very much.
KH
5.0 out of 5 stars Denkanstoß für nicht Veganer
Reviewed in Germany on October 10, 2018
Very informative. I encourage watching it with an open mind.
One person found this helpful
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