Page 6 of 8 FirstFirst ... 345678 LastLast
Results 51 to 60 of 74

Thread: Big,fat Michael Moore

  1. #51
    SuperJude™'s Avatar IRC Interloper
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Woodstock NY
    Age
    55
    Posts
    929
    I am awaiting the download before I make any comments about it, though I have read a bit about the movie of course.

    First off, I kinda got tired of Michael Moore's schtick at the end of Bowling for Columbine once I realised how he edits things EXACTLY how he wants them. Nothing wrong with that of course, just didn't like his style, though I thought the K-mart thing was really moving.

    However, living in Liberal Woodstock NY as I do, everybody hates Bush with a passion and has seen and been talking a lot about Farenheit 9-11.

    My god it amazes me all the terrible things that happen right here at home and some of these people need a movie to tell them how to feel. I worry about my response to the 7 miutes of black screen during the 9-11 calls, since like I said, I never saw Michael Moore down there, while a bunch of proffesional athletes and even DeNiro managed to come. So it's weird to have somebody who was not part of a story be the story teller.

    The things is this: I think ALL presidents have/had their own agendas, and we are all pawns anyway in a sense to government and business. I also DO NOT think Bush plotted 9-11, cause I hear morons in my own town saying things like "Bin Laden and Bush plotted it". Humans really will say whatever without thinking sometimes.

    But is Mr. Moore the guy I want presenting all my facts? No. Some facts, maybe. Again, let me see the movie first, since it could be great or it could suck, have to see it. However It is just that, a movie dressed up as a Doc.

    What I do not get is this line of thinking: Bush is a moron, but has managed to plot and scheme secretly, but (and here is the kicker) NOT so secretly that the liberal left doesn't know exactly what he is up to.

    Like being liberal makes you a mind reader of conservatives. Fuckin' A humans crack me up sometimes at the leaps. Here it is folks: the media HATES Bush. I have never seen a president more disrespected. It's like it is finally pay back time for Nixon or something.

    LOL

    Anyway, just some thoughts. I movie is a movie. There may be facts but don't kid yourself, it ain't all fact.

    -SJ™

    @ j2k4: Just got a better pc and broadband, so I'll be around. Besides, I am always on irc in #KLchat.

    peace.
    "We Love You SuperJude!"- the fans

  2. The Drawing Room   -   #52
    Poster
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Xikitistan
    Posts
    188
    Originally posted by SuperJude™@12 July 2004 - 19:20
    A: A movie is just a movie, dressed up as a doc or not. Why let one man tell you how to feel?
    Youve said that twice and i dont know how you got to that conclusion. Jacques Cousteau made documentaries, and you wouldnt think he "told you how to feel". You say Farenheit 9/11 is a movie, how can a movie tell you how to feel?Does Titanic tell you how to feel about icebergs?
    Unless you think Farenheit 9/11 is going to change peoples mind on the elections. What kind of person do you think would be influenced by a doc (or a movie) when voting?Not a smart one i believe, maybe you think americans arent very smart

    Your thought would be based on : americans are so stupid that will vote for Kerry because of F 9/11
    Im not saying you are wrong there, im just saying you might be wrong

  3. The Drawing Room   -   #53
    SuperJude™'s Avatar IRC Interloper
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Woodstock NY
    Age
    55
    Posts
    929
    Originally posted by yonki@13 July 2004 - 05:01
    Youve said that twice and i dont know how you got to that conclusion. Jacques Cousteau made documentaries, and you wouldnt think he "told you how to feel". You say Farenheit 9/11 is a movie, how can a movie tell you how to feel?Does Titanic tell you how to feel about icebergs?
    Unless you think Farenheit 9/11 is going to change peoples mind on the elections. What kind of person do you think would be influenced by a doc (or a movie) when voting?Not a smart one i believe, maybe you think americans arent very smart

    Your thought would be based on : americans are so stupid that will vote for Kerry because of F 9/11
    Im not saying you are wrong there, im just saying you might be wrong
    Not sure what you are getting at, that was a little rambling there.

    But I shall attempt an answer. Many people do seem genuinely effected by this film, like they are being shown something of pure fact that is eye opening. Read the threads I am sure you can conclude the same thing.

    Also, don't bash Americans with subtle jousts like "Your thought would be based on : americans are so stupid that will vote for Kerry because of F 9/11
    Im not saying you are wrong there".

    I think highly of my country and my countryman.

    =SJ™
    "We Love You SuperJude!"- the fans

  4. The Drawing Room   -   #54
    Biggles's Avatar Looking for loopholes
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Scotland
    Age
    68
    Posts
    8,164
    I think I will stick with my original view that this movie is not out there to convert Conservatives to vote Democrat. It is simply designed to motivate existing Democrats to go out and vote.

    In the last US election only 49% of the electorate voted. If MM can rally an additional 5% of the Democrats to get off their butts then Kerry will win. Not because existing Republicans are unhappy but because their sleeping voters didn't wake up.

    Of course there is the possibility that nothing will alter the decline in voting and only 47% will vote this time - making it anyones' guess.

    As I said elsewhere, I read the book so I consider myself excused from the movie.
    Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum


  5. The Drawing Room   -   #55
    j2k4's Avatar en(un)lightened
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    Oh, please...
    Posts
    16,304
    Originally posted by Biggles@13 July 2004 - 14:44
    I think I will stick with my original view that this movie is not out there to convert Conservatives to vote Democrat. It is simply designed to motivate existing Democrats to go out and vote.

    Not because existing Republicans are unhappy but because their sleeping voters didn't wake up.

    Biggles-

    You dare not overlook the fact events (many other than Mr. Moore's movie) will bestir Republicans to turn out in numbers at least on a par with Dems.

    Many Republicans will vote because they are aware of the effect of Moore's film, which is not, after all, playing in a Democrat vacuum.
    "Researchers have already cast much darkness on the subject, and if they continue their investigations, we shall soon know nothing at all about it."

    -Mark Twain

  6. The Drawing Room   -   #56
    Biggles's Avatar Looking for loopholes
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Scotland
    Age
    68
    Posts
    8,164
    Originally posted by j2k4+13 July 2004 - 21:00--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (j2k4 @ 13 July 2004 - 21:00)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'> <!--QuoteBegin-Biggles@13 July 2004 - 14:44
    I think I will stick with my original view that this movie is not out there to convert Conservatives to vote Democrat. It is simply designed to motivate existing Democrats to go out and vote.

    Not because existing Republicans are unhappy but because their sleeping voters didn&#39;t wake up.

    Biggles-

    You dare not overlook the fact events (many other than Mr. Moore&#39;s movie) will bestir Republicans to turn out in numbers at least on a par with Dems.

    Many Republicans will vote because they are aware of the effect of Moore&#39;s film, which is not, after all, playing in a Democrat vacuum. [/b][/quote]
    One would think so.


    On the other hand, if I were a betting man (which I am not), I would plump for the 47%.

    Nevertheles, a lot could happen between now and November. A big AQ attack could see people sticking with the status quo. It may only be twelve bar blues but what you know is sometimes comforting.
    Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum


  7. The Drawing Room   -   #57
    SuperJude™'s Avatar IRC Interloper
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Woodstock NY
    Age
    55
    Posts
    929
    Here is an analogy I love.

    I too wondered wtf happend in 2000, how Gore could have lost, and I don&#39;t just mean Florida (and before you start howling "they stole it" it was a Supreme Court decision), I meant like how could Bush have beat Gore in his own state.

    The guy who said this was/is a Dem btw, but the gist of it is this: Pick up trucks are the #1 seller in the U.S.

    What does that mean? It means that while the educated high minded left have decided they are both the brains and concience of this great country they overlook the people who drive the pick up trucks who may have other views and in 2000 that lack of foresite took a lot of people by suprise.

    Who is the last presidential candidate to lose their own state? Hell even Mondale took his home state.

    This is politics again, not just some movie .

    BTW I am now going to sit down and watch Farenheit 911 (god bless the internet I say) and judge the movie on it&#39;s own merits, though I am judging this as a movie and not a doc., but open minded I remain.

    -SJ™
    "We Love You SuperJude!"- the fans

  8. The Drawing Room   -   #58
    Rat Faced's Avatar Broken
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Newcasil
    Age
    59
    Posts
    8,804
    Welcome back SJ


    Theres a 1/2 hour bit in the middle you can just skip through...

    You wont be missing anything.



    Hell, you wont if you just skip to the end.

    Its got more spin than a spinning thing... which kinda spoils the facts, coz that means you lump the facts in with the spin and get really confused.

    If i was there, it wouldnt have made me vote Dem..... unless i was in one of the many places that i cant see it, coz id think there was more to it than there is




    Maybe you should make MM the prez, he appears to have mastered the only real qualification now...

    An It Harm None, Do What You Will

  9. The Drawing Room   -   #59
    j2k4's Avatar en(un)lightened
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    Oh, please...
    Posts
    16,304
    I must here thank Busyman for reminding me of Reason magazine, whence this came:

    Moore Didn&#39;t Start the Fire

    Why Fahrenheit 9/11 fails to ignite

    Brian Doherty

    The one time I met Michael Moore, he told me a wildly entertaining story about how, right after all the pointy-heads at Mother Jones fired him because he was portly and from the Midwest, he grabbed a bunch of union cameramen and charged in on Morton Kondracke and asked him to please recite the Patriot Act, seeing as how he&#39;d voted for it and all.

    Kondracke, as Moore tells it, sheepishly admitted he didn&#39;t remember a thing about the Act, then turned aggressive. He first ordered Moore angrily out of his Cape Cod office, then shot at the documentarian, barely missing him. It seemed like his whole tale didn&#39;t hold together in some way I couldn&#39;t pin down while he recited it, but he had me laughing hysterically—especially with his very vivid use of Flint, Michigan street colloquialisms to describe how Kondracke&#39;s feckless shot parted his hair. (Sorry, I&#39;ve forgotten the precise colloquialism.)

    Don&#39;t bother fact-checking his ass, or mine. I never met Michael Moore, and that story is a baroque fantasy formed from my half-memories of all the similar stories of Moore whoppers that always seem to come up when writing about him.

    My mind drifted to such fantasies while watching his new hit film because Fahrenheit 9/11 itself is—and this was a genuine surprise to me—so disappointingly dull. It&#39;s only the firestorm of discourse surrounding it that has created enough ambient heat to warm this tedious farrago and make it seem palatable. As is blindingly obvious from all the fooferaw surrounding the movie, Fahrenheit 9/11 works as a chemical test whereby your preconceptions can be determined by observing what color you turn upon exposure to it. Those opposed to its thesis of course find it painfully propagandistic and based on some verifiable untruths; those sympathetic manage to smile on it indulgently even while seeing its flaws.

    That said, I&#39;ll lay out the prejudices I brought into this movie, a movie I sincerely regret having found a failure. Obviously, I was never a big Moore fan. But I was prepared to view this film with charity, and to hope it would succeed in its goals, because I am sympathetic to its thesis. I agree that George Bush is a terrible president and that the war in Iraq should not have been fought. (I shamefully acknowledge that I am the only pundit whose dispassionate viewing was in any way warped by anything as petty as my predispositions, and I hope confessing to it here can in some small way atone for that sin.)

    This affected, for one example, my comparative reactions to the bits of Moore&#39;s trademark meant-to-be-funny "gotcha" bits in this movie vs. ones in Bowling for Columbine. In Columbine, Moore attacks Dick Clark with cameras for the sin of having financial interests in restaurants that gave people jobs that didn&#39;t instantly solve all their family problems. That I found not only unentertaining as dark cinema comedy, but stupid, because I couldn&#39;t begin to see Moore&#39;s point—to do so requires a general animus toward capitalism that I don&#39;t have.

    But I was rooting for two similar examples from Moore in Fahrenheit: reciting the Patriot Act from an ice cream truck circling Washington D.C. streets, and encouraging congressmen to get their children to enlist in the armed forces. That&#39;s because I both see, and agree, with the points behind them: that congressmen should understand the laws they impose on us, and that they should seriously consider the personal, human costs of the wars they allow presidents to wage. Still, even I found those scenes in Fahrenheit falling flat and barely eliciting a chuckle—mostly because there was nothing particularly comic or unexpected about the reactions of the people at whom Moore tried to toss his pranksterish monkeywrench. (The ice cream bit is funnier to read about than watch—even Moore seems to realize this, letting the scene end abruptly.)

    The movie, as everyone in the world has already pointed out, has many journalistic problems. Beyond any actual misstatements of fact, these problems are inherent in the necessary thinness of a two-hour movie, which in verbal terms will be at best the equivalent of a mid-length magazine feature. This film, though, is trying to make a case that demands a book to detail and explain in full.

    For example, it is certainly interesting that James Bath, who was in the Texas Air National Guard with Bush in the early &#39;70s, later became a financial advisor to the Bin Laden family and donated money to some of Bush&#39;s early business ventures. Interesting, but what of it? We really need to dig a little deeper to learn anything useful from that factoid—or to learn if there&#39;s anything useful to be learned from it. The mere accumulation of "links" without any deeper understanding of what those links mean is not only unilluminating, it&#39;s not even very good propaganda: There are dozens of reasons to be appalled that the Bush family, or the U.S. government, is cozy and kind and friendly with the Saudis. But except for the fact that Osama and 15 of the 9/11 hijackers were Saudi nationals, this movie doesn&#39;t even hint at any of them. (Indeed, Moore evinces a particularly old-fashioned, Flint, Michigan style hard-hat leftism here, daring the doyens of diversity to attack. Some key bits in Fahrenheit ride on representations of foreigners, whether Saudi or Palauan, as sinister and/or risible merely because they look and dress funny to Middle American eyes.)

    Like so many human conflicts—especially ones over group identity and tribal values, which is what the liberal v. conservative divide within the two-party context mostly is—arguments both within this movie and between it and its detractors swirl not so much around verifiable specific facts but around overarching narratives and assumptions about motives. What was Bush thinking as he was told about the Twin Tower attacks while entertaining a room full of kids? What were the real motives behind attacking Iraq? (Little noted regarding this fiercely anti-Bush foreign policy film is the fact that the words "neocon" and "Israel" are not, in my memory, uttered once, and Moore is nowhere gonzo enough to engage in any specific conspiracy theorizing, as opposed to weirdly suggestive "links.") Are the financial links between the Bush family and Saudi interests, between the Carlyle Group and weapons manufacturers, between oil companies, pipeline schemes, and the war in Afghanistan, actually dispositive about the decisions the U.S. government has made, before and after 9/11?

    Well, I guess it&#39;s possible, but this movie comes nowhere close to proving it, or even shedding light down the paths one would have to walk to begin trying to prove it. I&#39;d like to be able to pay the movie the compliment of saying that even by bringing such issues to the table, Moore has done a public service—a little public choice analysis when applied to government actions, whether domestic or foreign, is always welcome and should never be dismissed out of hand as "conspiracy mongering."

    But Moore&#39;s style and tone are never those that invite further investigation; they are those of the cop at a tough collar. He has caught Bush here, and there, and everywhere, Moore says; and the only question to be asked is, do we just vote him out or string him up? But if you asked the hard question: What have we caught him doing, this movie never provides a very clear answer. Being indecisive, and being rash; helping impose a police state, but not giving a lonely Oregon cop the homeland security resources he needs; starting a war in Afghanistan, and not doing it fast enough and hard enough; being in thrall to the Saudis, while simultaneously waging a war in Iraq that the Saudis decidedly did not want. (To be fair, or maybe unfair, Moore doesn&#39;t tell us that last part.)

    By the time the chronological walk through Bush&#39;s presidency gets us to Iraq, this becomes a movie not so much about Bush and why he is a bad president as about war and what it can do. Cavils about "balance" and "fairness" from war supporters regarding this movie are almost all bitter jokes—I&#39;ll take seriously complaints that this movie has too many bloody corpses, smiling pre-invasion Iraqis, and weeping mothers only from those whose pro-war discourse grapples seriously with the fact that there were/are any of those.

    Works of art or journalism that are dedicatedly and fairly representative of the dizzyingly broad and complicated skein of reality are to be applauded and treasured. But they aren&#39;t the only kind that deserve to exist in discourse over public policy. Boldly staking out ground is also useful. Moore&#39;s movie sells itself as two-fisted goal-oriented agitprop, so it is only fair to judge it as such. (And even as such, it fails.) But it does deliver some truths about war that too much standard discourse elides: That it makes young men enthusiastic murderers—and then can make them disillusioned, cold, empty, and haunted. That what we did in Iraq—whatever else it did—destroyed the lives, hopes, homes, and loves of many, many ordinary people who used to walk down the streets of Baghdad smiling, laughing, and playing; that it left and continues to leave many mothers of both Iraqis and American soldiers bent over in grief and crying out to God for understanding that will never come.

    Whatever Moore&#39;s other failures of journalism and art, that is both a specific factual truth and a deep spiritual truth about war that it is always appropriate to bring to the table, and one that any defender of this war, or any, should neither fear addressing, nor scoff at or belittle when it is brought to the fore.
    "Researchers have already cast much darkness on the subject, and if they continue their investigations, we shall soon know nothing at all about it."

    -Mark Twain

  10. The Drawing Room   -   #60
    vidcc's Avatar there is no god
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    5,606
    i don&#39;t know why all the fuss.....they seem to like each other





    it’s an election with no Democrats, in one of the whitest states in the union, where rich candidates pay $35 for your votes. Or, as Republicans call it, their vision for the future.

Page 6 of 8 FirstFirst ... 345678 LastLast

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •