Fahrenheit 9/11 Review

by JoBlo (joblo AT joblo DOT com)
June 1st, 2004

FAHRENHEIT 911
RATING: 9/10
http://www.joblo.com/fahrenheit911.htm

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PLOT:
Filmmaker Michael Moore returns to the front pages with a follow-up to his Oscar-winning documentary BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE, this time focusing his journalistic energies on the relationship between current U.S. President George W. Bush, the Saudis, specifically the Bin Laden clan, as well as the purported "fake" reasons that he decided to send his country to war in Iraq. Sit back and watch the fireworks.

CRITIQUE:
When I first saw BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE back in the year 2002, I was blown away by how any one documentary could be, at the same time, compelling, touching, humorous, informative and highly entertaining, but there he was, Michael Moore, creating a film that was able to, not only, engage me for a period of two hours with insight into deeper issues that seemed to have been "missed" by most of the mainstream media, but having the visual panache to keep me seated and paying attention to such "dreary" topics and giving half a shit! Since then, many pundits have laced Moore for his "brand" of editing, his alleged one-sidedness and re-creations to prove a point, but I went into his latest documentary with the same amount of grains of salt that I would any other such film. I came out, once again, engaged, entertained, informed, satisfied and this time around, absolutely convinced that the current President of the United States was a "bad man" of various proportions who asked his fellow citizens to fight a war for reasons ultimately really known only to himself and a handful of others, but having little or anything to do with any true attempt to stop terrorism, capture Osama Bin Laden/Al Quada or prevent Saddam Hussein from using his invisible "weapons of mass destruction". Michael Moore didn't make me believe these things by the end of his film, I was already quite convinced about the real reasons behind the war before I even heard about Moore's movie, but he put all of the pieces together as he did in BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE and should be commended-no, strike that- given a medal of f*ckin' honor for having the balls to go out there, utilize the freedom that he's been given by his country and attempt to find the real story behind most of the bullshit that politicians consistently regurgitate down our throats every day.

Politics and crookedness certainly do go hand-in-hand from time to time, but when a subject matter as important as an actual war against another country, in which the lives of every day freedom-loving Americans are put to risk (and innocent foreign civilians, of course) at the whim of a man who seems to have about as many conflicts of interest in the war, than anyone ever had any conflicts of interests in anything...you really have to wonder hard about the theory that places fire where there is lots and lots of smoke. And Mr. George W. Bush...is burning up! As per COLUMBINE, Moore uses his narration to take us through a variety of his findings beginning with the debacle that turned out to be the 2000 election in the first place, to the relationship between Bush and the Bin Laden clan before he became President, the suspicious way the FBI decided to fly the entire American contingent of the Bin Laden family out of States two days after 9/11 without even holding any of them for questioning (wouldn't it have made sense to, at the very least, have asked them a couple of questions about their crazy uncle/brother?), as well as the relationship between the Saudis, the Bushes and oil. We also get plenty of actual footage from inside Iraq (included an entire sequence that follows a U.S. troupe's Christmas eve interrogation of a seemingly unsuspicious Iraqi family), as well as humiliations that some of the U.S. soldiers cause onto certain Iraqi detainees. Most of the footage also gives you the impression that many of the soldiers, sadly, do not even seem to know what they're doing there, are receiving mixed messages and can't understand why everyone is so pissed off at them (here's a clue: your President is an asshole).

Moore also continues to relate how the rich in America are continually making the major decisions for their country, while the poor, underprivileged (many of them, black), end up with the brunt of the actual actions. Unlike his previous documentaries, this one doesn't feature any memorable trademark Moore one-on-one confrontations, but does have one nearing the end which has Moore roaming the streets of Washington, attempting to get congressmen to sign one of their own children up for the war-only one of the 550+ congressmen actually has a child in the service (funny how that works). Moore brings up a myriad of valid and inexplicable reasons why Bush did what he did and continues to do what he does, and once again, relates much of it to an "environment of fear" that's built up in the States via the media, a theory that I believe in myself. This documentary didn't touch me as much as his previous one did, and wasn't as "entertaining" either, but those elements weren't at the top of its list this time around. I didn't think Moore needed to take the few cheap shots that he did take a Bush though (although granted, they were humorous), like the emphasis on the fact that he took a lot of "vacation time" as President, since I didn't really see how one's laziness would equate them to being "a bad person" per se. I also would have preferred he leave juvenile stuff like showcasing politicians preparing for their interviews before a camera out of his documentaries, since everyone's always nervous at that point, so it's unfair to make insinuations about anything they do or say at that time. You've got enough valid points in the film, Michael...don't turn your target into a "clown", because we're likely not to take his legitimately unconscionable decision-making process as seriously, if you do.

But overall, FAHRENHEIT 9/11 seems like a growth for Moore with a lot less emphasis on himself (I think you only see him twice in the entire film), a lot less emphasis on set-ups, prodding tactics and eye-catching video (although we do get a couple of graphic bits, including some stuff of the U.S. soldiers in Iraq), and a lot more emphasis on facts, figures, quotes and actual footage from real events that help back his case. As I said back in 2002 for BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE, I will say again for this film: if there is one movie that you will see this year, make sure that it's FAHRENHEIT 9/11. Considering that the American nation is being asked to pick a new President this coming fall (trust me, I don't think Kerry is "all that" either, but if Bush is actually voted back in, I seriously suspect that the world will be in much greater danger in the years to come), this film could not come out at a more opportune time. Please watch this movie with your teenage kids, show it in your schools and make sure that you sit down in communities and watch it together and then discuss its various implications afterwards. You may not agree with everything that Michael Moore or his film is saying, but you cannot deny that much of what he does claim is, at the very least, oddly coincidental, or and the very worst, outrageously immoral, and that in itself, leaves much to question afterwards. One thing I do wish for future such documentaries is that other people, besides Moore, create them as well. This guy has way too much pressure on himself as the seemingly only person running around, uncovering actual news behind the news. Where are the rest of the world's great investigative news journalists? Too busy covering Michael Jackson and Lacy Petersen's disappearance, eh? C'mon guys...left, right...any sides...come out of the woodwork and create some damn insightful documentaries already! If this isn't the right time, I don't know when it ever would be.

Where's JoBlo coming from?
Bowling for Columbine (9/10) - Capturing the Friedmans (7/10) - The Kid Stays in the Picture (6/10) - Lost in La Mancha (7/10) - Metallica: Some Kind of Monster (7/10) - Roger & Me (8/10) - Spellbound (8/10) - Startup.com (8/10) -Step Into Liquid (7/10)

Review Date: May 17, 2004
Director: Michael Moore
Writer: Michael Moore
Producer: Michael Moore
Appearances by: Michael Moore as himself
Debbie Petriken as herself
George W. Bush as himself
Genre: Documentary
Year of Release: 2004
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