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<DIV>In a message dated 6/19/2004 12:09:18 PM Mountain Daylight Time, mike_larkin2001@yahoo.com writes:</DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: blue 2px solid"><FONT face=Arial>Hopefully, there aren't too many white lies in his<BR>film. That's his Achilles Heel.</FONT></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV>
<DIV>Ebert seems to think the facts of the movie pass initial muster---</DIV>
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<DIV>http://www.suntimes.com/output/eb-feature/cst-ftr-moore18.html<BR><BR>'9/11': Just the facts? <BR><BR>June 18, 2004<BR><BR>BY ROGER EBERT FILM CRITIC<BR><BR>A reader writes:<BR><BR>"In your articles discussing Michael Moore's film 'Fahrenheit 9/11,' you <BR>call it a documentary. I always thought of documentaries as presenting facts <BR>objectively without editorializing. While I have enjoyed many of Mr. Moore's <BR>films, I don't think they fit the definition of a documentary."<BR><BR>That's where you're wrong. Most documentaries, especially the best ones, <BR>have an opinion and argue for it. Even those that pretend to be objective <BR>reflect the filmmaker's point of view. Moviegoers should observe the bias, <BR>take it into account and decide if the film supports it or not.<BR><BR>Michael Moore is a liberal activist. He is the first to say so. He is <BR>alarmed by the prospect of a second term for George W. Bush, and <BR>made "Fahrenheit 9/11" for the purpose of persuading people to vote against <BR>him.<BR><BR>That is all perfectly clear, and yet in the days before the film opens June <BR>25, there'll be bountiful reports by commentators who are shocked! shocked! <BR>that Moore's film is partisan. "He doesn't tell both sides," we'll hear, <BR>especially on Fox News, which is so famous for telling both sides.<BR><BR>The wise French director Godard once said, "The way to criticize a film is <BR>to make another film." That there is not a pro-Bush documentary available <BR>right now I am powerless to explain. Surely, however, the Republican <BR>National Convention will open with such a documentary, which will position <BR>Bush comfortably between Ronald Reagan and God. The Democratic convention <BR>will have a wondrous film about John Kerry. Anyone who thinks one of these <BR>documentaries is "presenting facts objectively without editorializing" <BR>should look at the other one.<BR><BR>The pitfall for Moore is not subjectivity, but accuracy. We expect him to <BR>hold an opinion and argue it, but we also require his facts to be correct. I <BR>was an admirer of his previous doc, the Oscar-winning "Bowling for <BR>Columbine," until I discovered that some of his "facts" were wrong, false or <BR>fudged.<BR><BR>In some cases, he was guilty of making a good story better, but in other <BR>cases (such as his ambush of Charlton Heston) he was unfair, and in still <BR>others (such as the wording on the plaque under the bomber at the Air Force <BR>Academy) he was just plain wrong, as anyone can see by going to look at the <BR>plaque.<BR><BR>Because I agree with Moore's politics, his inaccuracies pained me, and I <BR>wrote about them in my Answer Man column. Moore wrote me that he didn't <BR>expect such attacks "from you, of all people." But I cannot ignore flaws <BR>simply because I agree with the filmmaker. In hurting his cause, he wounds <BR>mine.<BR><BR>Now comes "Fahrenheit 9/11," floating on an enormous wave of advance <BR>publicity. It inspired a battle of the titans between Disney's Michael <BR>Eisner and Miramax's Harvey Weinstein. It won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes <BR>Film Festival. It has been rated R by the MPAA, and former New York Gov. <BR>Mario Cuomo has signed up as Moore's lawyer, to challenge the rating. The <BR>conservative group Move America Forward, which successfully bounced the <BR>mildly critical biopic "The Reagans" off CBS and onto cable, has launched a <BR>campaign to discourage theaters from showing "Fahrenheit 9/11."<BR><BR>The campaign will amount to nothing and disgraces Move America Forward by <BR>showing it trying to suppress disagreement instead of engaging it. The R <BR>rating may stand; there is a real beheading in the film, and only fictional <BR>beheadings get the PG-13. Disney and Miramax will survive.<BR><BR>Moore's real test will come on the issue of accuracy. He can say whatever he <BR>likes about Bush, as long as his facts are straight. Having seen the film <BR>twice, I saw nothing that raised a flag for me, and I haven't heard of any <BR>major inaccuracies. When Moore was questioned about his claim that Bush <BR>unwisely lingered for six or seven minutes in that Florida classroom after <BR>learning of the World Trade Center attacks, Moore was able to reply with a <BR>video of Bush doing exactly that.<BR><BR>I agree with Moore that the presidency of George W. Bush has been a disaster <BR>for America. In writing that, I expect to get the usual complaints that <BR>movie critics should keep their political opinions to themselves. But <BR>opinions are my stock in trade, and is it not more honest to declare my <BR>politics than to conceal them? I agree with Moore, and because I do, I <BR>hope "Fahrenheit 9/11" proves to be as accurate as it seems.<BR><BR> </DIV></DIV>
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<P align=center></FONT><FONT lang=0 face="Kabel Bk BT" color=#000000 size=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" PTSIZE="10"><I>Believe every half-whispered, half-remembered lie <BR>Where truth is a luxury they can't afford to buy</I><BR><BR>-chumbawamba, "scapegoat" </FONT><FONT lang=0 face=Arial color=#000000 size=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" PTSIZE="10"><BR>
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