Super Size Me - Subtitles

It’s a silent film about a man who lost his appetite for the American Dream.

Without the dramatic orchestral swell, the statistic feels naked. Cold. True. And then, the final line of the entire subtitle file: [Silence] In a world where 85% of Facebook videos are watched without sound, filmmakers are scrambling to make their content "caption-friendly." Super Size Me accidentally did this perfectly 20 years ago.

[One in four Americans visits a fast food restaurant every single day.] super size me subtitles

So next time you’re doom-scrolling on the train, don't put your earbuds in. Turn on the captions. You’ll realize that Super Size Me isn't just a documentary about a man who ate too many fries.

We all remember the visuals. The queasy close-ups of a half-eaten Quarter Pounder. The pale sheen of sweat on Morgan Spurlock’s forehead. The doctor shaking his head as the liver enzymes spike. It’s a silent film about a man who

In the age of silent scrolling (watching videos on mute in coffee shops or on the train), revisiting Super Size Me through the lens of its closed captions offers a surprisingly hilarious, chaotic, and sometimes disturbing alternate narrative.

But what if you couldn’t hear the dialogue? What if you relied entirely on the to experience the documentary that shocked a nation? Turn on the captions

Reading these descriptors in sterile white text on a black background makes the physical decay feel almost clinical. It’s like reading a medical report written by a horror novelist. One thing subtitles do brilliantly is capture what we don't say. In the scenes with Spurlock’s then-wife, Alex, a vegan chef who watches him poison himself daily, the spoken dialogue is patient and supportive. "How are you feeling?" she asks.