Posted on 03/31/2003 6:43:44 AM PST by prman
In one of the most loathsome examples of boorish public behavior, film director Michael Moores Oscar acceptance rant perfectly captured by his unwashed, ungroomed appearance went beyond all bounds of decency and civility, and spiraled downward into what can only be described as an infantile tantrum.
Mired in the lonely delusions of those reliving the great liberal loss of the year 2000, Moore castigated President Bush as a fictitious commander in chief, winning by fictitious election results, and sending the nation into war for fictitious reasons, as vouchsafed by such leaders as the pope, Bill Maher and the Dixie Chicks.
Just to get the Neanderthal porker off the stage, the orchestra had to play fortissimo to drown out his screeching, since he looked like he was building up a head of steam.
Upbraided shortly afterward backstage for this disgusting display, Moore self-righteously declared that he didnt give up his free speech rights when he entered the Kodak Theater. His lèse-majesté, however, was more akin to someone being invited into a private home for a dignified evening, who immediately drops his drawers and begins to defecate on the carpet.
In fact, Moores entire career can be characterized thus. Here is a man who is so convinced of the rightness of his beliefs that he will actively find ways to embarrass or insult anyone who does not share his peculiar ideas, preferably by shoving a camera in their faces.
Moore has always sought a soapbox from which to preach his version of enlightened populism, which contains all the usual socialist enthusiasms: anti-corporation, anti-capitalism, radical environmentalism, anti-Republican, and so on.
In the mid-1980s, he was the editor of the Michigan Voice, a leftist tabloid that was circulated for free on college campuses. I recall having read several issues of this while in Ann Arbor and being struck by the shrill anger and virulence that characterized his editorials and screeds. It made me wonder at the time how any writer could find such a bottomless well of vitriol to splash around in issue after issue and still remain sane.
The publication flopped after a year or two and disappeared. Moore moved to California for a brief position as editor of Mother Jones magazine, until he locked horns with the publisher and was fired.
His next venture was more successful trying his hand at film production, he created the clever satire Roger and Me, which became a runaway hit at the box office.
Moores films are not really documentaries, but rather propaganda. He has become the Leni Riefenstahl of the left. Though her Triumph of the Will and Olympia are masterful in their craft, Riefenstahl, unknowingly perhaps, put a happy face on Third Reich fascism.
But in their own way, Moores Roger & Me, The Big One and Bowling for Columbine are likewise all dishonest to the core.
Moore makes no attempt to present both sides of an issue, as an honest documentarian would, but skews his scripts to make his ideological foes simply the targets of scorn and derision in his films.
Thus, former GM CEO Roger Smith is made to look callous and unfeeling by Moores hectoring during his patented brand of party crashing at a GM Christmas party. Poor Charlton Heston is played for the fool in his own home, after Moore ambushes him in an unannounced interview with questions suggesting that, as president of the NRA, he was somehow responsible for all American children killed by guns.
TV producer Dick Clark fell victim to the same trick: Moore somehow holds him responsible for burdening a welfare mother with a low-wage job at one of his California restaurants.
But this is Moores straw man modus operandi: Misrepresent or downright falsify facts, then find doltish subjects, corporate bogeymen or unsuspecting celebrities to interrogate, then edit their unguarded, uninformed or witless comments only to laugh at them and reinforce his own twisted view of events.
Moores critics have called him everything from Chomsky for children and One-Trick Phony to simply a jackass. Others note the hypocrisy of a radical socialist who claims to speak for the common man yet lives in a $1.9 million New York apartment and sends his daughter to a posh private school.
Whatever her political indiscretions, Leni Riefenstahl was a transcendent, visionary German filmmaker whose early 20th century work will stand the test of time for high technical and cinematic achievement.
By comparison, Michael Moore, though superficially clever, only reveals a body of work and public persona built upon a laundry list of lies, misrepresentations and sophomoric fantasies.
Barrett Kalellis is a columnist and writer whose articles appear regularly in various local and national print and online publications.
As repugnant as she is, she actually has a technical mastery of her craft. Moore is just a hack with minimal technical skill.
The difference is that Reifenstahl had real talent.
Moore is just a hack.
So9
Another difference, Leni was a babe, M.Moore is an obese slob.
I'm using it shamelessly, but now will give proper credit.
Here's a book synopsis I found on a leftist site while searching for some anarchist tracts for an FR thread:
An essay exploring the origins of fascism (while touching on National Socialism and other Latin forms), and its connections to the revolutionary Left - Mussolini, after all, translated Kropotkin into Italian, and the Nazis were the National Socialist German Workers Party.
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