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Michael & Us: Michael Moore finds himself on the business end of a documentary
The Weekly Standard ^ | 05/04/2007 | Louis Wittig

Posted on 05/04/2007 1:51:57 PM PDT by Caleb1411

IT'S A GLOWING Mediterranean late-afternoon and Richard Gere is ambling up the red carpet at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 is up for the Festival's top prize. A reporter in the crowd asks Gere what he thinks of the man from Flint.

"I agree with a lot of what Michael Moore says. I don't always agree with his methods. But I agree with what he says."

This is a brief scene from Manufacturing Dissent, a new documentary on Michael Moore--the man, the filmmaker, the publicity machine. It's been almost 20 years since Roger & Me premiered, and audiences are hip to Moore's methods: his ambush interviews and deft ability to re-make facts on the editing table. Yet he has no rival as the most successful documentary-maker in history. And while left-wing politicians and intellectuals pour him the top-shelf respect usually reserved for Al Sharpton, there's something disturbing about who Michael Moore is and what he does. Like it or not, however, millions of Americans more or less agree with Gere's summation.

When they began the project two-and-a-half years ago, Manufacturing Dissent's Canadian co-writers/directors (and self-described liberals) Rick Caine and Debbie Melnyk wanted to do an interview with Moore and use it as the basis of a standard profile.

"We thought this was going to be purely celebratory biography," says Caine. But Moore's office blew off repeated interview requests. The only way to get footage was to reprise Roger & Me and tape themselves asking Moore to talk to them.

BETWEEN UNSUCCESSFULLY HOUNDING Moore for a sit-down at stops on his 2004 Slacker Uprising tour, Caine and Melnyk visit his past in Manufacturing Dissent. It turns out that the Michael Moore at the height of his triumph, thundering his famous anti-Bush acceptance speech at the 2003 Academy Awards, isn't that different from the Michael Moore at the beginning of his career. Photos from the early '70s show a long-haired kid with an impish grin covering his self-doubt. When he ran for a school board seat in his hometown of Davison, Michigan (a placid suburb; he's not, as he claims, from Flint) at age 18, he beat the odds and won, becoming the youngest elected official in the state. Playing the rebel has always worked for him and Moore seems to be wearing that same grin in every frame.

Manufacturing Dissent interviews some of Moore's long-time associates. Some are straightforward admirers. Some know a man completely different from the one they see on television. Some have been burned by him. They mention how he lies, hogs credit, avoids responsibility for his bombast and still affects his little-guy pose while living in a lakefront mansion.

For Moore's detractors, Manufacturing Dissent offers a freezer full of red meat, although Caine and Melnyk don't dwell on it. Because while Moore may be a less-than-ideal human being, it is his work, not his character, which is uniquely repellant.

For instance, in one old interview featured in Manufacturing Dissent, the Canadian film critic David Gilmour asks Moore to respond to criticism that his 1995 comedy Canadian Bacon wasn't that funny. Instead of laughing it off, Moore glares at Gilmour and calls him a snob. When another film critic asks Moore about the honesty of his slick editing in Roger & Me, Moore accuses him of being a tool of GM. Caine recalls an interview with one of Moore's friends that didn't make the final cut. "He said 'Michael has an almost pathological need to be right. If you look at a lot of what he does in that light, it makes sense."

In archive footage, a reporter asks Moore what techniques should be off limits to a documentary filmmaker. "I think you should be allowed to use any technique available to tell a true story," he replies. This interpretation has produced lots of money for Moore, and a revolution in the genre. Yet it hasn't produced much literal truth. In a Roger & Me montage, Moore chronicles Flint's embarrassingly desperate efforts at economic revitalization. He leads viewers to believe they occurred after GM left town. In fact, they were tried and failed well before it.

In another bit from Roger & Me, Moore explains how Nightline planned to do a special on Flint, where struggling local leaders were to talk with Ted Koppel via satellite hook up. In the next scene, a local TV reporter informs audiences that the special has been cancelled because ABC's satellite truck was stolen by an unemployed GM worker. What a gem. How did Moore get it? Caine and Melnyk made some calls.

The answer is, he made it up. There was no laid-off car thief. No truck had been stolen. There was no truck to be stolen. Nightline had never attempted to do a special on Flint. Moore made the entire incident up, gave a script to a cooperative reporter and passed it off as real.

MANUFACTURING DISSENT doesn't resolve as satisfyingly as did Roger & Me, where Moore finally caught Roger Smith at a GM Christmas party, asked him an honest question, and watched as the callous plutocrat barreled right past him. In Manufacturing Dissent, Melnyk sneaks into one of Moore's press conferences, tells him about the project and pleads, again, for an interview. "It's the Canadians again," Moore says, making an exasperated face. But after the press conference he does grant a 10 minute interview.

But the contrast isn't as great as you might think. The premise of Roger & Me was that Roger Smith would not talk to Michael Moore. In Manufacturing Dissent's big payoff, Melnyk and Caine learn that Moore actually did get two interviews with Roger Smith, in which they talked--for longer than Moore talked to Melnyk--about Flint and GM. There are videotapes, transcripts, and witnesses (whom Moore subsequently asked to deny everything). So the very founding conceit of Roger & Me, the film that launched Moore's career, is predicated on a lie.

At the end of Caine and Melnyk's meta-documentary, it becomes impossible to "agree" with Moore's work, the way Richard Gere and so many others seem to do. One can no more "agree" with Moore in Roger & Me or Bowling for Columbine or Fahrenheit 9/11 than one can "agree" with Steven Spielberg in Jaws. There's nothing to agree with. They're just stories.

Of course it's still possible to enjoy Moore's stories for what they are. And if you share his political reflexes, his antic-driven storytelling imparts a soaring sense of pleasure, which for some people, must feel very much like sympathetic agreement.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: michaelmoore

1 posted on 05/04/2007 1:51:59 PM PDT by Caleb1411
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To: Caleb1411

More like the business end of a Big Mac


2 posted on 05/04/2007 1:52:59 PM PDT by Puppage (You may disagree with what I have to say, but I shall defend to your death my right to say it)
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To: Puppage

The guy’s a propagandists in a league with Joseph Goebbles. He knows what he wants to say and makes films that say it. He’s a technician, and a liar, but he’s smooth at it.


3 posted on 05/04/2007 1:58:15 PM PDT by kjo
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To: Caleb1411

maybe he helped James Frey write A Million Little Pieces too....now since that is no longer considered a memoir...perhaps we can no longer call Moores “artistic work” documentaries but drama movies.


4 posted on 05/04/2007 2:00:19 PM PDT by donnab
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To: kjo

He tells the moonbats what they want to hear.
He manufactures a product that makes them feel secure in their moonbattery. So they buy it.


5 posted on 05/04/2007 2:01:17 PM PDT by Names Ash Housewares
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To: Caleb1411

“I think you should be allowed to use any technique available to tell a true story.”

And someday, when SpongeMike Sweatpants tells a TRUE story, he’ll employ some of them.


6 posted on 05/04/2007 2:10:42 PM PDT by Right Cal Gal (Remember Billy Dale!!!)
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To: kjo

Moore uses his lies and deceit to feed the left the garbage they want to hear. If a conservative tried to use his tactics he would be attacked by the media until he was thoroughly exposed as a fraud. Fat slobs like Moore can only succeed if the media agrees to be their accomplice.


7 posted on 05/04/2007 2:10:58 PM PDT by peeps36 (OUTLAWED WORDS--INSURGENT,GLOBAL WARMING,UNDOCUMENTED WORKER,PALESTINIAN,TERMINATED PREGNANCY)
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To: Names Ash Housewares

‘Michael has an almost pathological need to be right. If you look at a lot of what he does in that light, it makes sense.”


8 posted on 05/04/2007 2:11:48 PM PDT by griswold3 (Don't 'Bob Dole' me in 2008!!)
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To: Caleb1411
Moore's a rich Islamo-fascist-loving conniver as treasonous as they come.

He's a huge wad of cellulite who got real good at fabricating fraud on celluloid.


9 posted on 05/04/2007 2:13:50 PM PDT by henbane
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To: peeps36

Yes, that’s about it, the MSM loves and protects this guy and his “procedures”. Were he a conservative, the media would be forming a lynch mob.


10 posted on 05/04/2007 2:15:58 PM PDT by kjo
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To: Caleb1411

I think Canadian Bacon is funny, but understand why others don’t. I also liked Second City.

I’ve never seen any of his crockumentaries & never will.


11 posted on 05/04/2007 2:37:31 PM PDT by GoLightly
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To: Caleb1411
You know, being rich and famous isn’t worth a nickle if you have to sell your soul to get there.

No matter how rich you are, it is not fun if you feel angry, hateful, and like a steaming pile of crap all day long.

My condolences to Mikey for the position in which he has put himself. I wouldn’t trade places with that hate filled nutcase for any amount of millions.

12 posted on 05/04/2007 2:42:03 PM PDT by picard (I have already previewed or do not wish to preview this composition.)
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To: Caleb1411

“In another bit from Roger & Me, Moore explains how Nightline planned to do a special on Flint, where struggling local leaders were to talk with Ted Koppel via satellite hook up. In the next scene, a local TV reporter informs audiences that the special has been cancelled because ABC’s satellite truck was stolen by an unemployed GM worker. What a gem. How did Moore get it? Caine and Melnyk made some calls.

The answer is, he made it up. There was no laid-off car thief. No truck had been stolen. There was no truck to be stolen. Nightline had never attempted to do a special on Flint. Moore made the entire incident up, gave a script to a cooperative reporter and passed it off as real. “


This really doesn’t seem like a minor detail.


13 posted on 05/04/2007 4:17:16 PM PDT by james500
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To: kjo
The guy’s a propagandists in a league with Joseph Goebbles.

He's Lumpy Riefenstahl.

14 posted on 05/04/2007 5:49:14 PM PDT by rhema ("Break the conventions; keep the commandments." -- G. K. Chesterton)
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To: kjo
The guy’s a propagandists in a league with Joseph Goebbles [sic].

Fahrenheit 9/11 reminded me a lot of Nazi anti-Semitic movie Der Ewige Jude (The Eternal Jew), both playing fast and loose with the facts to "prove" their point of view.

15 posted on 05/05/2007 8:47:54 PM PDT by RayChuang88
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To: Caleb1411

To get a insiders view of Moore check out...
http://www.newmediajournal.us/guest/m_westfall/04142007.htm


16 posted on 05/06/2007 4:27:31 AM PDT by carolgr
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To: Coleus
In another bit from Roger & Me, Moore explains how Nightline planned to do a special on Flint, where struggling local leaders were to talk with Ted Koppel via satellite hook up. In the next scene, a local TV reporter informs audiences that the special has been cancelled because ABC's satellite truck was stolen by an unemployed GM worker. What a gem. How did Moore get it? Caine and Melnyk made some calls.

The answer is, he made it up. There was no laid-off car thief. No truck had been stolen. There was no truck to be stolen. Nightline had never attempted to do a special on Flint. Moore made the entire incident up, gave a script to a cooperative reporter and passed it off as real.

bump

17 posted on 05/26/2007 8:46:57 AM PDT by Diago (What was Urban Moving Systems?)
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