Over the past year, genetically modified organisms have become as pervasive in the public's conscience as they are in American's food.


The latest addition to that conversation, Jeremy Seifert's documentary "GMO OMG," hopes to break down some of the debate that has led to massive protests, fierce labeling initiatives and a blanket ban in most of the European Union.


GMO labeling bills passed in both Maine and Connecticut earlier this year, but California's highly contentious Prop 37 was rejected by voters last November. Washington has a similar initiative on the ballot this year, I-522, and Monsanto recently pumped $4.6 million into the fight against it.


Several reviews have criticized the film as a "plain-folks primer" that lacks hard scientific analysis. But Seifert said the film "is more about awakening and discovery" in a time where we really don't know what the long-term effects of GMO consumption are.


Seifert spoke to The Huffington Post about the inspiration behind the film.


(The following is an edited transcript of the chat.)


What compelled you to make this film? You tell the story of GMOs through your role as a father -- was there a specific meal you were having with your kids that served as a catalyst?


Yeah, I think that's exactly what it was. It wasn't just a meal, it was many meals and it was the ice cream trucks that would park outside of our house every evening and watching my children lap up this stuff ... and feeling that weight on my shoulders that we don't really know what they're eating.



That is the most important, intimate, beautiful relationship that I have in my life, with my children. On the other hand, food is really the most intimate relationship we have with the world around us. We literally take nature into us, into our bodies.


I also realized the more people I talked to, they were coming from the same place I was coming from, which was a place of ignorance: not knowing what it is, and not understanding it.


What do you hope to accomplish with this?


I think the primary or basic goal is wakefulness and awareness, to raise the consciousness so that people know there's a debate.


In the last decade, we never really had the conversation in this country about GMOs -- what they were, if we were okay with them. We just never had the conversation and they were released on the market and people were eating them blindly because they weren't labeled.


I've found that most people don't even know there's a debate going on, most people don't know what a GMO is. I'm hoping that the film helps people engage with the debate and engage with the issue and engage with the fact that the chemical companies are feeding us, and are you okay with that?


One of the main dilemmas presented in the film is resistance from these GMO manufacturers to talk with you, and the public in general. Were you ever able to get ahold of anyone?


No. I never talked to anybody in big ag, even off camera to just have candid conversations.


Your family is a big part of this documentary. What are your eating habits now?


I mean, we by-and-large try to avoid not just GMOs, but anything that's been sprayed in pesticides and herbicides. So we really try to eat mainly organic, and that is hard.


But when you learn to feed yourself and cook you can do it affordably. We do eat at home most of the time, we do buy whole foods and bulk foods and it is more affordable.


But it's frustrating as hell going to the grocery story and picking up for, you know, Cinco de Mayo. I'm going to buy organic blue corn tortilla chips and organic cheese and organic this and that and suddenly, a tiny grocery bag is $85.


What kind of reactions have you heard so far?


A lot of "Oh my god I never knew about this."


Even though people have said this is really hard to deal with and think about, at the end of the film they felt hopeful rather than just completely pissed off and overwhelmed.


There's been a sense that people feel more empowered to make a change.


"GMO OMG" is now screening in theaters around the country. For a listing of upcoming events and showings, head on over to the film's website.



Also on HuffPost:



GMO OMG Official Trailer from Compeller Pictures on Vimeo.





Loading Slideshow...



  • A picture taken on October 9, 2008 shows an ultralight helicopter hovering above a field where Greenpeace activists and Austrian organic farming association BIO AUSTRIA wrote the message 'NO GMO' (Genetically Modified Organism) by planting light green coloured organic buckwheat in a field of organic peas in Breitenfurt, some 60 kms south east from Vienna. (DIETER NAGL/AFP/Getty Images)




  • Thirty-five tons of corn put by Greenpace activists at Mexico City's Zocalo Square as a protest against the sowing of transgenic corn, form a map of Mexico on February 26, 2009. (Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP/Getty Images)




  • People walk on a plateform past an advert against genetically modified (GMO) food on February 15, 2011 at a subway station in Paris. (MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP/Getty Images)




  • Greenpeace activists demonstrate against genetically modified organisms (GMOs) on November 24, 2008 in front of EU headquarters in Brussels. Greenpeace called on the European Union to suspend the authorization of GMOs until the EU is capable of evaluating the risks they pose. (DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP/Getty Images)




  • Greenpeace activists stand a protest in front of Los Pinos presidential residence in Mexico City against the farming of transgenic corn in Mexico, on June 26, 2009. (ALFREDO ESTRELLA/AFP/Getty Images)




  • A Greenpeace activist impersonating Brazil's Chief of Staff Dilma Russeff takes part in a protest against the authorization to grow transgenic rice during a meeting of the National Biosecurity Technical Commission (CYNBIO) at the Science and Technology Ministry in Brasilia October 15, 2009. (JOEDSON ALVES/AFP/Getty Images)




  • Greenpeace activists distribute samples of transgenic rice as part of a protest against the authorization to grow transgenic rice during a meeting of the National Biosecurity Technical Commission (CYNBIO) at the Science and Technology Ministry in Brasilia October 15, 2009. (JOEDSON ALVES/AFP/Getty Images)




  • The logo of French 'Les faucheurs volontaires' (Volunteer trimmers of GMO) is seen as demonstrators stand in front of the booth of French union 'la confederation paysanne' (farmers union) during an action against GMO at the International Agricultural Fair on March 6, 2010 in Paris. The European Commission authorised, on March 2, the cultivation of a genetically modified potato, developed by BASF, the first such green light for 12 years. The issue of so-called 'frankenfoods' has long been a matter of fierce debate in Europe and the commission stressed that the Amflora potato in question would be able to be grown only for 'industrial use' including animal feed, rather than for human consumption. (BERTRAND LANGLOIS/AFP/Getty Images)




  • A couple waves after a parody of union between German chemical giant BASF (L) and the European Food Safety Authority (R) - Autorite europeenne de securite des aliments- (EFSA) during the International Agricultural Fair on March 6, 2010 in Paris. (BERTRAND LANGLOIS/AFP/Getty Images)




  • A giant banner depicting a farm, is seen as Greenpeace activists hold banners to protest against the genetically modified (GMO) food production in front of the parliament building of Budapest on February 10, 2010. (ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP/Getty Images)




  • A grey-cow is pictured near Greenpeace activists in traditional Hungarian costume standing in front of a giant banner depicting a farm as others hold a banner reading 'GMO-free Europe' to protest against the genetically modified (GMO) food production in front of the parliament building of Budapest on February 10, 2011 during a demonstration. (ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP/Getty Images)




  • Greenpeace activists hold a banner to protest against the genetically modified (GMO) food production in front of the parliament building of Budapest on February 10, 2010. (ATTILA KISBENEDEK/AFP/Getty Images)




  • A man dressed up as a bee holds a placard during a demonstration organized by French Professional Beekeepers Federation (FFAP) to protest against the use of pesticide on September 14, 2011 along the Saint-Bernard quay in Paris. (JACQUES DEMARTHON/AFP/Getty Images)




  • Anti-Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) demonstrators protest in front of Colmar courthouse on September 28, 2011, eastern France, during the trial of 60 militants accused of destroying MGO plants. (FREDERICK FLORIN/AFP/Getty Images)




  • An anti-GMO activist holds a banner reading 'Science without conscience is but the ruin of soul' during an action to call for the ban of the 'MON 810', a variety of genetically modified maize (corn) developed by Monsanto Company on January 23, 2012 at a Monsanto storehouse in Trebes near Carcassonne, southern France. (ERIC CABANIS/AFP/Getty Images)




  • Is Branding Food With "GMO" the Kiss of Death?


    Prop 37 in California proposes that genetically modified food be labeled "GMO". If you knew your food was genetically modified, would you still eat it?