Michael Moore has just confirmed the name of his new movie, Capitalism: A Love Story, which will explore the evils of corporate governance. The Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11 filmmaker released a teaser trailer (see above) for the previously untitled film last month.
Capitalism: A Love Story is set for release on Oct 2nd, which marks the one year anniversary of the Senate vote to approve the $700 billion Wall Street bailout/rape/pillage.
Earlier in the year Moore had appealed for whistleblowers from the financial sector to come forward. It'll be interesting to see who stepped up to the plate.
"It will be the perfect date movie," said Moore in a statement released to the press yesterday. "It's got it all -- lust, passion, romance and 14,000 jobs being eliminated every day. It's a forbidden love, one that dare not speak its name. Heck, let's just say it: It's capitalism."
I'm somewhat disappointed with Micheal Moore. One would think that after all these years of Documentary experience that he would take on more challenging subject matter, perhaps the economic crisis in Zimbabwe, or maybe the Drug cartels in Mexico?
SergeantPsycho said:
I'm somewhat disappointed with Micheal Moore. One would think that after all these years of Documentary experience that he would take on more challenging subject matter, perhaps the economic crisis in Zimbabwe, or maybe the Drug cartels in Mexico?
+1
Can we get more sane and rational comments from you? This was nice to read.
SergeantPsycho said:
I'm somewhat disappointed with Micheal Moore. One would think that after all these years of Documentary experience that he would take on more challenging subject matter, perhaps the economic crisis in Zimbabwe, or maybe the Drug cartels in Mexico?
+1
Can we get more sane and rational comments from you? This was nice to read.
It's odd you should mention that because before posting this I thought to myself "If I were president, what would I say in response to this Micheal Moore film". Perhaps I should use that paradigm in the future.
SergeantPsych, i see your point but i suppose he just feels the need to try and make his own people wake up and realise the injustice in their own communities first. I've only been to America once but the general view the rest of the world has is that you are a bunch of fucking morons. Which obviously isn't completely true, but i suppose as you as a country have so much power, it makes more sense to start with you guys and work out. You'll never be able to help other countries so long as your government are corrupt.
bdeaxn said:
i suppose as you as a country have so much power, it makes more sense to start with you guys and work out. You'll never be able to help other countries so long as your government are corrupt.
Of course it makes more sense. The problem is, the U.S. has a history of not making sense and our culture here is to police the world and invade....er...um...."fix" problems based on what we deem is best.
One of the problem is that we can't fix shit internally - but we still delude ourselves into thinking it's more important to make changes outside our borders.
As for Michael Moore - I would recommend the documentary "Manufacturing Dissent." It exposes the spin Michael puts on his documentaries and how evasive he is when a documentary team from Canada confronts him publicly.
I enjoyed Moore's documentary on socialized medicine (Sicko) - but I question his honesty in creating documentaries.
I really dislike Michael Moore's films. I've tried to watch them objectively...and I just can't get on board with him. Some of the claims he makes in his movies...that he presents as fact....are just flat out not true.
Not that I love corporate America or anything, but this is a film distributed by Paramount Vantage, a subsidiary of Paramount Pictures, a subsidiary of Viacom.
Huh.
(Wasn't Fahrenheit 9/11 made available free online? Or was he just encouraging file sharers?)
I have to agree. I saw Sicko, and found that the most effective moments, such as the video of a homeless woman being dumped curbside immediately after a surgery, were the least Michael Moore-esque moments. If he had cut back on the grandstanding such as going to Gitmo and packed in another 15 minutes or so of information, it would have been a much more effective documentary.
I have to agree with the pervailing sentiment on this thread. I'm certainly a left-leaning fella, but I've really been turned off by Moore. To me, it's like he's the left's version of Hannity or one of those jerks, pushing his own agenda and putting his own spin and the facts be damned.
His movies are the ultimate form of finger pointing. He's not much better than Bill O'Riley's ambush interviewers; in fact, he does ambush interviews himself. He just has a bigger budget, more time, and maybe a better way with words.
I wish he'd use his enormous voice, clout, and following to... y'know... do something.
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SergeantPsycho
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