Past the Boiling Point
'Fahrenheit 9/11' is just the beginning. Brace yourself for the
explosion of left-leaning documentaries'
By David Ansen
Newsweek
Sept. 13 issue - If talk radio and Fox TV are the preferred media of the
right, film has emerged this year as the left's not-so-secret weapon.
There's never been an election in which political documentaries played a
significant role-until now.
Michael Moore's incendiary "Fahrenheit 9/11" packed movie houses, but most
of these new documentaries are meant for home viewing; theatrical
distribution is just the icing on the cake. The major movie companies
won't touch these films: Disney famously refused to release "Fahrenheit,"
and last week Warner Bros. announced it was pulling an antiwar documentary
David O. Russell made to accompany the re-release of "Three Kings" both in
theaters and on DVD, claiming it was "inappropriate" in a political
season. And Sony got cold feet about the DVD of "The Control Room," a
documentary on Al-Jazeera that is implicitly unsympathetic to the war in
Iraq; Lions Gate will bring it out instead.
In addition to "Fahrenheit" (DVD Oct. 5), this explosion of urgent and
angry political films includes Robert Greenwald's one-two punch of
"Uncovered" and "Outfoxed" (both on DVD before they appeared in theaters,
and which MoveOn.org has been promoting on the Internet), the Karl Rove
expose "Bush's Brain" and "The Hunting of the President" (DVD Sept. 28),
which documents the campaign to bring down the Clinton presidency. The
subtext of all these films-and the explicit argument of the alarmist
"Orwell Rolls in His Grave," about the corporate takeover of our media-is
that the major news outlets have dropped the ball and don't bring us the
real news. How many people, watching "Fahrenheit's" footage of protesters
pelting Bush's car with eggs on Inauguration Day, wondered why they'd
never seen that before?
Few of these documentaries have the rowdy entertainment value that Moore
delivers. But his polarizing persona, and his use of fiction-movie
techniques, make Moore's screed easy for pro-Bush viewers to dismiss. They
may have a harder time refuting Greenwald's "Uncovered," with its
impressive lineup of expert opinion-CIA operatives, weapons inspectors,
State Department officers, intelligence analysts-marshaled to demolish the
administration's rationales for war. One emerges from this unhysterical,
cogently argued film convinced that the war has been a costly diversion
from the fight against terrorism-and created terrorism where it didn't
exist before. Greenwald's "Outfoxed" is an equally convincing demolition
of Fox News-though no one's going to be shocked to hear that Fox slants to
the right. Greenwald shows us a poll revealing that 67 percent of Fox
viewers believed there were links between Al Qaeda and Saddam (contrasted
with 16 percent of NPR listeners); 35 percent said weapons of mass
destruction had been found.
"Bush's Brain" (now in theaters and on DVD) paints a scary, if sloppily
constructed, portrait of the mild-mannered Rove as a ruthless, brilliant
political strategist who has almost singlehandedly created George W.
Bush's political persona, and who'll stop at nothing to see that Bush-and
Rove-hold onto power. Though it's filled with juicy examples of Rove's
dirty campaign tricks (ask Max Cleland), this broadside would hardly hold
up in court. Then again, according to the film, Rove never leaves his
fingerprints at the scene of the crime.
We're not done yet. "The Hunting of the President" makes a strong case
that there was a right-wing conspiracy (not vast, perhaps, but well funded
and well connected) to bring Clinton down by any means possible. And
"Hijacking Catastrophe" (in theaters Sept. 10) forcefully argues (much as
Moore does) that a neocon cabal has used 9/11 to advance a radical
foreign-policy agenda and curtail civil liberties. Is your blood boiling
yet? On the left-and the right, as Zell Miller showed last week-anger and
outrage will be with us from now to November, and surely well beyond.
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