World Famous Comics NetworkWorld Famous Comics Network World Famous Comics CommunityComic Book ClassifiedsSketchCards.com
WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Podcasts | Shop
COLUMNS >> Tony's Online Tips | Philodoxer | Cover Stories | After the Golden Age | Baker's Dozen | Comics 101 | CyberDen



ScheduleUPDATED TODAY! Wed, 3-Dec-2008
Anything Goes TriviaAnything Goes Trivia
Bob Rozakis
Megaton ManMegaton Man
Don Simpson
Not Available ComicsNot Available Comics
Matt Feazell
TrevorTrevor
Piper & Lee


NewsNEWS 2-Dec-2008 10:17pm
Punisher: War Zone Interactive Comic Boo...
WEEK OF TOP COW: Filip Sablik
Blu-ray: The Dark Knight Blu-ray Review
Stars: What Say You?: Batman R.I.P.

Comic Book - Movie - Video Game - Anime 

 How to: Advertise Here | Send Review Items | Contact Us GO SHOPPING >>
Shop SHOP
Top Selling Graphic NovelsTop Selling DVDsTop Selling ElectronicsTop Selling Electronics
Shop the Kabuki Store
David Mack
Shop the Amy Allen Store
Amy Allen


Shop for World Famous Comics at CafePress
WFC
Swag


Shop Our Auctions
WFC Auctions


More >>
Podcasts PODCASTS

Comic Geek Speak - Bryan Deemer and Company
Comic Geek Speak

More >>
Contests CONTESTS

Anything Goes Trivia - Bob Rozakis
Anything Goes Trivia


More >>
Columns COLUMNS

Tony's Online Tips - Tony Isabella
Tony's Online Tips
The Philodoxer - Abel G. Pena
The Philodoxer


Cover Stories - Jon Knutson
Cover Stories
After the Golden Age - Alvin Schwartz
After the Golden Age


Baker's Dozen - Bill Baker
Baker's Dozen
Comics 101 - Joe Corroney
Comics
101


More >>
Comics COMICS

Trevor - Piper and Lee
Trevor
Megaton Man - Don Simpson
Megaton Man


Tailipoe - Craig Boldman
Tailipoe


Not Available Comics - Matt Feazell
Not Available


More >>
Friends & Affiliates
Adobe Store
Amazon.com
Anime Studio
Apple Store
Dick Blick Art Materials
eBay
GoDaddy.com

StarWarsShop.com
TFAW
The Philodoxer
Thoughts on writing and publishing, and the various sources of entertainment...
A weekly column by Abel G. Peña, best known for his Star Wars work.

Current Column >> Column Archives | About Abel | Message Board

THE PHILODOXER for 02/25/2007
Michael Wilson Vs. Michael Moore

If you're trying to do a documentary, keeping yourself honest is, I think, impossible--but within certain boundaries is possible. I mean, you have to quote people out of context. People aren't in this room with me, people didn't see me walk out of the kitchen, you're gonna do some editing.... You're automatically lying. -- Penn Jillette, Michael Moore Hates America

Michael Moore Hates America

Michael Moore Hates America is a documentary that takes a page from Michael Moore's own movie Roger & Me, in which the filmmaker tries to track down an allegedly unethical millionaire and conduct an interview with him. Except this time, the heroic documentarian that's calling out a millionaire is Michael Wilson, and this time the allegedly unethical millionaire in question is none other than Michael Moore.

Moore went on to an avalanche of success after Roger & Me, rocketing to celebrity and wealth with the controversial films he's best known for: Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11. However, the very quality that made these "documentaries" popular -- namely their one-sided nature and Da Vinci Code-flavored conspiratorial revelations -- quickly came to be questioned, and with good reason.

Most intelligent persons can agree that the most flattering thing that can be said about Moore's manipulative method of documentation is that he fights fire with fire. The perverse philosophy that two wrongs actually do make a right is understandably popular in the modern, perhaps timeless, social climate of irresponsibility. Its popularity, however, especially among the powerless, does not make it any less thoughtless, vengeful, shortsighted, and ultimately destructive to the human enterprise for truth.

In Michael Moore Hates America, Wilson goes to great lengths to hunt down Moore for a 45-minute interview to discuss the disparity in their views of America. And Moore goes to great lengths to avoid him, resorting to personal attacks, pleas of ignorance, and outright dishonesty. In the meantime, Wilson methodically questions "facts" from Moore's movies and interviews many of the people who have appeared in them, willingly and otherwise. And, time and again, their accounts of events don't match Moore's edited versions.

Wilson also doesn't shy away from pointing out his own character flaws and the temptations of the documentarian to manipulate and manufacture the truth. To this end, an extensive interview with Penn and Teller's erudite Penn Jillette serves as the highly effective conscience of the film. One of Jillette's most memorable lines is the warning to Wilson, "If you cut this footage so that I'm more negative about Michael Moore than I really am, or that I make points I didn't really make, I'll hunt you down and f*cking kill you." As Wilson is still alive, we can assume he did a fair job.

Wilson's documentary is hindered by the same deficiency that hangs like a cloud over all films of the genre: real life tends to be ordinary. Consequently, the movie ends anticlimactically, but only the naïve would expect Moore to actually grant Wilson his all-too reasonable request for an interview (though there is, in fact, one frosty showdown between the two Michaels). Wilson, young as he is, would've entered Moore's house of smoke and mirrors and waxed the floor with him. But this failure is brilliantly built into the very fabric of the movie's chief argument. And that argument is this: if Moore can insinuate in Roger & Me that multimillionaire and GM CEO Roger Smith's refusal to grant him an interview is proof of the man's guilt, then, by emulating Smith, Moore implicates himself by his own standards as guilty of the accusation of unethical behavior.

As one of Moore's own self-espoused fans tells Wilson in the film, "I like Michael Moore; I like what he stands for. However, I will give you this: he should've answered your question. And, in all honesty, he should also give you the interview, I feel." Moore's no-show, if not the greatest condemnation of Moore as a person, is at the very least a condemnation of Moore's pandering and immoral documentation methods. Ultimately, Wilson wins the day in the name of truth, and shows promise as an intelligent, ethical filmmaker.

Until next time, folks.

- Abel G. Peña

<< 02/11/2007 | 02/25/2007 | 03/11/2007 >>

Discuss this column with me in World Famous Comics' General Forum and at Pop Culture Bored.
Also, visit my website at www.abelgpena.com.



Recent Installments:
NEWESTMany September 11ths (09/09/2007)
08/26/2007Madness? This-is-Reefer!!!
08/12/2007D'oh! I mean, Woo-hoo!: The Simpsons Movie
07/29/20075 Essential Self-Promotion Practices and "Closing the Circuit"
07/15/2007Spaceballs: The Book Review!
07/01/2007Kill Bush, or Death of a Perfectly Good Idea
06/17/2007The Cold War Comes to Iceland
04/15/2007Grindhouse: The Art of the Twofer
03/25/2007300²
03/11/2007Of Vulgar Eloquence
02/25/2007Michael Wilson Vs. Michael Moore
02/11/2007The Last Weasel of Scotland
01/28/2007Don't Go Bush Before Having A Good Piss, Mate!
01/14/2007Labyrinth of Similitude
Archives >>

Current Column >> Column Archives | About Abel | Message Board

COLUMNS >> Tony's Online Tips | Philodoxer | Cover Stories | After the Golden Age | Baker's Dozen | Comics 101 | CyberDen



World Famous Comics Community
Sponsored by View Askew

Join message board discussions with:
Mike Allred
Dan Brereton
Joe Corroney
Jan Duursema
Danny Fingeroth
Insight Studios
Tony Isabella
David Mack
Tom Mandrake
Denny O'Neil
John Ostrander
Alvin Schwartz
Visit the:
General Forum

comicscommunity.com
- - -
- - -
FEATURES

Kabuki Website
David Mack's schedule, items for sale, and more!
Visit Feature

Amy Allen Website
Schedule and info for Amy Allen, Aayla Secura in the Star Wars film.
Visit Feature

More Features >>



WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Podcasts | Shop

Classic Movies. Low Prices. Free Shipping on Orders over $50.

World Famous Comics Network
World Famous Comics Community
ComicsCommunity.com
Comic Book Classifieds
ComicBookClassifieds.com
SketchCards.com
SketchCards.com

GO SHOPPING >>

© 1995 - 2008 World Famous Comics. All rights reserved. All other © & ™ belong to their respective owners.
Advertiser Info . Terms of Use . Privacy Policy . Contact Info
World Famous Comics Network