Film

How Many Times Did I Almost Walk Out of This New Movie About McDonald's?

January 19, 2017

There was a time when a burger, french fries, and bottle of soda from McDonald’s had an asking price of 35 cents. The restaurant, which has ballooned into an international chain since 1953, began as a tiny shack in San Bernardino. Customers would come to open windows, dictate their orders to a teenager, and, within seconds, exit with their food in hand.

Michael Keaton in 'The Founder'. Photo by Daniel McFadden & The Weinstein Company

John Lee Hancock’s The Founder, the 115-minute movie that opens tomorrow in theaters, begins at this point in American history. It centers on Ray Kroc (Michael Keaton), the Illinois man best known today for purchasing McDonald's from its original owners and becoming the chain's franchisee. At the film's beginning, Kroc is a fifty-year-old salesman who’s shilling other people's shitty inventions to buyers who don't bite, mostly small restaurants across the country. In this process, he meets the chummy McDonald brothers (John Carroll Lynch and Nick Offerman), proprietors of the eponymous fast-food joint. The pair is one of the few to express interest in the product Kroc's selling (in this case, it's a Prince Castle-brand milkshake machine made of tin). Kroc is utterly transfixed by the origin story of McDonald's, which the brothers relay to Kroc over a five-minute dinner conversation.

Kroc offers to help them sustain and grow their business. He has visions so grand for McDonald's that he begins to proselytize like the Elmer Gantry of fast food. “Franchise, franchise, franchise!” he exclaims one day in a parking lot to the brothers, convincing them to add his name to the contract with an eye on national expansion. He delivers his elevator pitches with sermonic fervor. His philosophy? McDonald’s can be the new American church.

Michael Keaton in 'The Founder'. Photo by Daniel McFadden & The Weinstein Company

Kroc slowly encroaches upon the brothers’ territory as he builds this operation into a chain. He strips the brothers of ownership of the very property they began. Keaton’s slimy, loosey-goosey style of performing lends itself well to this particular role: In this film, we bear witness to Kroc's transformation from an easily pitiable failure of a man to a titan of his own greed.

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The charge of Keaton's work is dampened by the film that surrounds it. As a director, Hancock, who directed The Blind Side (2009) and Saving Mr. Banks (2013) before this, lacks a sense of rhythm that’s enough to sustain interest in this narrative of one man's ravenous appetite for capital. The Founder follows a ploddingly episodic template: Kroc hits one roadblock, stumbles for a bit, and eventually overcomes. When he's pitching the franchise to prospective clients, there are moments when the baggage of Kroc’s past entrepreneurial failures seem to risk haunting him, but they soon subside. Hancock fails to intersperse the film's early scenes with a nuance that could foreground what’s to come, to give the blow of Kroc’s monstrous eleventh-hour reinvention that much more weight.

Michael Keaton in 'The Founder'. Photo by Daniel McFadden & The Weinstein Company

This is to say little of the film's unimaginative rendering of food. I’m not sure I’ve seen a movie that’s ostensibly about food whose aesthetic expresses such a profound disinterest in food. The film’s early scenes resemble a clunkily romantic McDonald’s ad campaign, with slow-motion shots of cheery families biting into burgers and frames of patties dolloped with ketchup and mustard. These shots are meant to represent the pure, aspirational culinary ideals that McDonald's was originally founded on before Kroc poisoned the franchise. Yet these shots feel clinical and efficient, first drafts of failed advertisements for a restaurant that no longer exists.

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Top Comment:
“I was at the opening of the McDonald's in April, 1955. Our father was a businessman in town (Des Plaines IL) and they were all invited to bring their families. I remember it very clearly, even though I was only 5. It was a HUGE treat as this kind of food place was new and different. We were frequent customers as the Choo Choo a block away from the new McDonald's. They are still open and haven't changed much from what I read on their site. The original McDonald's building is no longer, but a replica of it. Before they closed it to the public, we were in town and toured it. The basement is where they would peel the potatoes, which back then were all made fresh daily, no frozen. Way more to the story about the history and what our father shared with us. I would have never guessed it would develop into being such an icon. Those were the days! (Oh, and we ALL dressed up, the men in suits, women in dresses, I wore a pink frilly dress with black shiny shoes, even remember the flowered headband I wore so different from today's world. :) ) BB”
— BerryBaby
Comment

By the film's last scenes, Kroc has become a capitalist Godzilla, uncaring of the souls he’s knowingly stepped over. The conclusion may make you radically reconsider what came before it, because it seems that Hancock had inadvertently stumbled upon a message—don't be a corporate asshole—after flailing his way toward charting this everyman's ascent to stardom. By the film's end, the plight of these brothers, who didn’t see a cent of the profits they were promised via an unofficial handshake agreement with Kroc, lingers. How exactly this franchise so swiftly fell out of these brothers’ hands, and to a man motivated by such egotistical intentions, merits more rigorous treatment. It's a story still waiting to be told.

The Founder opens in theaters on January 20th in the United States.

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Mayukh Sen is a James Beard Award-winning food and culture writer in New York. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, the New Yorker, Bon Appetit, and elsewhere. He won a 2018 James Beard Award in Journalism for his profile of Princess Pamela published on Food52.

6 Comments

Jason T. February 19, 2019
To the author of this article:

You clearly didn't do your homework. Amateur! It sickens me how amateurish people of your generation have become. You have the ability to type and that's where your abilities end. You're unwilling to do the homework required to create a proper article that contains factual information - not rehashed gibberish they have obtained from simply watching a movie.

This is a movie - a movie that took liberties and flat out changed the facts.

In real life - those McDonald brother's not only received a lump sum payment up front, but also their royalties.

Again - it's your generation that believes everything they see, read or hear about through social media nonsense. You have a distinct inability to separate fact from fiction. Which means you're incapable of forming your own thoughts.
Simply put - you should not be writing articles. Instead - you should be flipping burgers.
 
Dale H. February 26, 2019
It is a vlog, he stated his opinion. You put down his writing and start with insults proving your lack of character. Grow up and maybe get a life.
 
Keira O. January 16, 2019
I couldn’t stomach the last half hour of this POS story, so I turned it off. Had NO idea what a subhuman sack of shit Kroc was. I got really upset watching this scumbag screw everyone over for the whole movie & didn’t bother wasting any more time—figures I didn’t need to watch the ending and I was already beyond pissed.
 
BerryBaby January 24, 2017
I was at the opening of the McDonald's in April, 1955. Our father was a businessman in town (Des Plaines IL) and they were all invited to bring their families. I remember it very clearly, even though I was only 5. It was a HUGE treat as this kind of food place was new and different. We were frequent customers as the Choo Choo a block away from the new McDonald's. They are still open and haven't changed much from what I read on their site. The original McDonald's building is no longer, but a replica of it. Before they closed it to the public, we were in town and toured it. The basement is where they would peel the potatoes, which back then were all made fresh daily, no frozen. Way more to the story about the history and what our father shared with us. I would have never guessed it would develop into being such an icon. Those were the days! (Oh, and we ALL dressed up, the men in suits, women in dresses, I wore a pink frilly dress with black shiny shoes, even remember the flowered headband I wore so different from today's world. :) ) BB
 
Kat January 21, 2017
also to draw attention to the phrase "Keaton's slimy, loosey-goosey style", um, haha, what?
 
Katie M. January 19, 2017
"Keaton’s slimy, loosey-goosey style" What?