At war: 'Fahrenheit 9/11' & 'Control Room'.When Cannes bestowed the Palme Pal·me , Olaf 1927-1986. Swedish politician. As premier (1969-1976 and 1982-1986) he was widely respected for his efforts toward peace and disarmament. Palme was assassinated in 1986. d'Or on Fahrenheit 9/11 last May, it wasn't all that surprising, a political paint bomb lobbed from Europe toward the White House. But the question remained, how would the film play in Peoria? To packed houses, we know now. Fahrenheit opened on 868 screens in June--unheard of for a documentary--then spread to twice that many on the 4th of July weekend, bringing Michael Moore's brand of political fireworks fireworks: see pyrotechnics. fireworks Explosives or combustibles used for display. Of ancient Chinese origin, fireworks evidently developed out of military rockets and explosive missiles and accompanied the spread of military explosives westward to home to Main Street and symbolically affirming his status as an American patriot. Fahrenheit 9/11 presents the typical Moore package: the faux-naive questions and good-time banjo music; the fun with American cultural absurdities; the rowdy rock 'n' roll rock 'n' roll: see rock music. populism, like REM's "shiny happy people holding hands" piped in over clips of Bush and Co. glad-handing various Saudi royals. But beneath the mirth works an ice-cold tactician. Fahrenheit 9/11 is not a documentary, it's a prosecution, charging a dark convergence of interest between the Bush family and the Saudis, including the wealthy bin Laden clan. As a prosecutor Moore works by a kind of evidentiary pointillism pointillism (pwăn`təlĭz'əm): see postimpressionism. pointillism In painting, the practice of applying small strokes or dots of contrasting colour to a surface so that from a distance they blend together. , not so much connecting the dots as spraying them into a shadowy outline of complicity. To take one typical charge, he notes that George H. W. Bush Such operatic insinuation INSINUATION, civil law. The transcription of an act on the public registers, like our recording of deeds. It was not necessary in any other alienation, but that appropriated to the purpose of donation. Inst. 2, 7, 2; Poth. Traite des Donations, entre vifs, sect. 2, art. 3, Sec. might well sway a jury, but it remains highly circumstantial; and indeed, Fahrenheit 9/11 is a masterly piece of propaganda. Tricky cuts and juxtapositions create damning, and quite possibly misleading, impressions of villainy Villainy See also Evil, Wickedness. Vindictiveness (See VENGEANCE.) Violence (See BRUTALITY, CRUELTY.) d’Acunha, Teresa portrait of devilish Spanish servant and kidnapper. [Br. Lit. . For instance, after informing us that the first to call Bush the victor on election night 2000 was Bush's own cousin, Fox News analyst John Ellis, Moore asks, "How does Bush get away with this?"--and cuts to a shot of Bush gleefully laughing. Later, following a somberly frightening montage of the World Trade calamity, Moore informs us that Saudi ambassador and Bush pal Prince Bandar dined privately with Bush at the White House just two nights later. They dined practically within sight of the Pentagon, he tells us--and cuts to a shot of the Pentagon in flames. Moore asks, "Did the two compare notes? ... I wonder if George Bush told Bandar not to worry, because he already had a plan." Then we cut to Richard Clarke testifying about Bush's insistent focus, in the aftermath of 9/11, on Saddam Hussein. Consider the implications of this presentation. First, that Bush was being callous in the extreme, if not traitorous, in inviting a Saudi to dinner on the heels of a murderous Saudi-led attack on Americans. Second, that he and Bandar spent a merry evening plotting how to safeguard the fortunes of the Saudis and their American corporate connections. And third, that they colluded in a cynical campaign to cover their tracks by starting a war against Iraq. These are grave charges, made through a folksy folk·sy adj. folk·si·er, folk·si·est Informal 1. Simple and unpretentious in behavior. 2. Characterized by informality and affability: a friendly, folksy town. 3. innuendo that looks a lot like demagoguery Demagoguery Hague, Frank (1876–1956) corrupt mayor of Jersey City, N. J., for 30 years. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 1173] Long, Huey P. (1893–1935) infamous “Kingfish” of Louisiana politics. [Am. Hist. , albeit of an often hilarious variety. Bush is a terrible president, and I want him gone as passionately as the next liberal. And maybe we need a Moore to help get the job done. But though in the past I have admired Moore's films--with reservations--this time the contrarian in me resists his Snidely Whiplash-like portrayals of villainy. Do we really need to know that deputy defense secretary Paul Wolfowitz greases his hair back with spittle spit·tle n. Spit; saliva. to know that his role in the Iraq war merits condemnation? To me, Fahrenheit 9/11 fares best when Moore chucks his warmed-over Saturday Night Live This article is about the American television series. For the show related to Big Brother (UK), see Saturday Night Live (UK). Saturday Night Live (SNL act and straightforwardly chronicles a hardworking and patriotic woman named Lila Lipscomb, from his hometown, Flint, Michigan, who loses a son in Iraq. Here Moore's primal sense of justice, roused on behalf of the mostly poor young Americans who join the armed forces, rises to a moving pitch of indignation. For once, Moore has the sense to shut up as Lipscomb quotes from her son's last letter: "I am so furious. Bush got us out here for nothing. I really hope they don't reelect re·e·lect also re-e·lect tr.v. re·e·lect·ed, re·e·lect·ing, re·e·lects To elect again. re that fool, honestly." Or dishonestly, either. Control Room is Egyptian-American director Jehane Noujaim's quietly remarkable study of the slipperiness of news in times of war. Her documentary takes us behind the scenes at the controversial Arab news organization, Al Jazeera, vilified by the Bush administration as an outlet for anti-American propaganda. Noujaim makes a strong case that this is not so. The mostly Arab reporters, editors, and producers we meet are candid about their dismay at the American invasion; having acknowledged their sympathies, they strive to produce a fair and balanced "Fair and Balanced" is a trademarked slogan used by American news broadcaster Fox News Channel. The slogan was originally used in conjunction with the phrase "Real Journalism. news show nonetheless. For instance, one staffer--doing simultaneous translation of a tendentious ten·den·tious also ten·den·cious adj. Marked by a strong implicit point of view; partisan: a tendentious account of the recent elections. Pentagon spokesman--mugs derisively de·ri·sive adj. Mocking; jeering. de·ri sive·ly adv.de·ri to Noujaim's camera, even as he translates the words, apparently without editorial comment, to Al Jazeera's listeners. And after conducting a phone interview with an American academic who delivers a ranting screed screed n. 1. A long monotonous speech or piece of writing. 2. a. A strip of wood, plaster, or metal placed on a wall or pavement as a guide for the even application of plaster or concrete. b. against American imperialism, Al Jazeera's chain-smoking senior producer, Samir Khader, blasts his interview director: "Where'd you get this guy? He's just a crazy activist." In comparison, the American reporters Noujaim surveys seem guilty of lazy dependence on Pentagon spinners, and sometimes of outright cheerleading The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. . Its preoccupation with objectivity places Control Room in profound contrast to Fahrenheit 9/11. From the opening scenes, when we listen in on Al Jazeera staffers discussing the merits of eliminating Saddam, we find ourselves in the presence of something Michael Moore never provides: a substantial clash of opinions. Sometimes in Control Room the clash takes place within a single person. One eloquent and combative reporter, Hassan Ibrahim, loudly rejects the American condemnation of Al Jazeera for showing Iraqi civilians wounded in bombing attacks. "You are the most powerful nation on earth, I agree. You can defeat everybody, I agree. You can crush everyone, I agree. But don't ask us to love it as well!" Yet seconds later, asked by a despairing colleague, Who is going to stop the Americans?, Ibrahim answers: "The United States is going to stop the United States. I have absolute confidence in the American Constitution. And I have absolute confidence in the ability of the American people." Noujaim catches this ambivalence again and again, opening up wide realms of ambiguity where Moore habitually narrows to a hard point of certainty. There is no doubt, for instance, what Moore would do to the Army spokesman, Josh Rushing, who is one of Noujaim's primary subjects: he would destroy him. But in doing so, he'd miss what Noujaim catches--namely, Rushing's deep consternation when the U.S. government condemns Al Jazeera for broadcasting video of American soldiers' mutilated mu·ti·late tr.v. mu·ti·lat·ed, mu·ti·lat·ing, mu·ti·lates 1. To deprive of a limb or an essential part; cripple. 2. To disfigure by damaging irreparably: mutilate a statue. bodies. Rushing describes feeling ill while watching the clip; then goes on to admit that the next night, when the network showed wounded and dead Iraqis, he found himself less bothered--and is deeply troubled by the difference in his own reactions. "It makes me hate war," he says. Such perplexed moments sound a human note missing from Moore's films. Noujaim does people the honor of exploring their conflicting allegiances--and their mixed motives. After listing his many reservations about the American system in general and news organizations in particular, Al Jazeera producer Khader draws deeply on his cigarette and says: "But between us, if I get offered a job at Fox, I will take it." He smiles, wanly, adding, "I have plans for my children." In the documentary's closing scene, a soft unexpected rain falls over the media outpost in the desert as Khader ponders the futility of trying to cover war fairly. "There is one single thing that will be left," he says. "Victory, and that's it. People like victory. You don't have to justify it. Once you are victorious, that's it." History is written by the victors--they have the final control room--and all you can do in the face of this reality, Jehane's film implies, is to assert an idea and a model of fairness, however doomed. Michael Moore, on the other hand--whose production company is tellingly called Dog Eat Dog Dog Eat Dog When the market for a good or service is ruthlessly competitive. Notes: Electronics retail is often thought to be a dog eat dog market. Blockbuster sales every weekend, bashing competitor products, and "lowest price guaranteed" tactics are characteristics of Films--fights fire with fire. A brilliant propagandist, he offers no glimpse of a world without war; of a disinterested view or conflicted mind; or of a fairness that, in his view, we cannot afford. |
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