queerbychoice (
queerbychoice) wrote2004-06-25 10:20 am
Anybody Want to See Fahrenheit 9/11 with Me?
Anybody want to see Fahrenheit 9/11 with me? Anyone who lives in northern California want to see Fahrenheit 9/11 with me? Because if I don't commit myself to seeing it with someone I have a feeling I'll just put off until forever the idea of ever seeing it at all, because that's what I always do with all movies. But I feel like I should probably make some sort of effort not to do that with this one. And I'd be happy to drive two or three hours out of my way if somebody would just make sure I see the thing.

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(and at the very end a random audiencemember threw his/her waterbottle at bush-on-the-screen and we all clapped mightily.)
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We should go see it together. It can be a big ironic demonstration, two of the most un-movie-people ever seeing a movie. When are you free? Not including this weekend, because this weekend is hopelessly busy for me.
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http://slate.msn.com/id/2102723/
(I have not seen the movie nor read the whole article. But it was recommended by a friend of mine whose intellect I respect. In other words, though not a fan of Moore, she's not a Bush-loving redneck either. Me, I'm scared and confused by politics.) ;)
I did see Bowling for Columbine. I could understand and agree with most of what Moore was trying to say, and I'm glad there's somebody out there to offset the giant homogenous corporate media conglomerates, and make people think about the information they're fed. But thinking about the movie afterward left me feeling mislead, as if I had just watched a propaganda film. I'm wondering if Farenheit 9/11 will feel the same.
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The commentary on Michael Moore that I have been most impressed by so far is Roger Ebert's here. I am perfectly aware that he has done things wrong, quite a few of them even. I do not consider him any sort of saint. But I still want to see the movie, and since I already knew every single thing that everything I've read has said the movie mentions, since I already read the same sources of that information that Michael Moore did and I already posted links to all those sources in my journal as I came across them, it is not as though I'm going to see the movie to learn anything new about 9/11. No, I'm going to see the movie to learn how effective and honest a job the movie did at propagandizing. Why? Because Michael Moore is right that it could affect the outcome of the election, and I want to get a sense firsthand of how good an effect it's likely to have, and how much of the effect will be dissipated by the audience getting informed by movie critics that the information was presented dishonestly.
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