Michael Moore Essay

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    today, America stands too close to the capitalist end of the spectrum, and thus there are many economic inequalities, in that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer and pull the less poor down with them. In the example of Flint, Michigan in Michael Moore’s film Roger and Me, when the many workers laid off when the GM factory relocated suddenly became unemployed. Another example of capitalism gone too far is in Mark Dowie’s article “Pinto Madness,” when Ford’s lobbyists made it virtually impossible

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    Bowling For Columbine

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    interactive documentary directed by Michael Moore (Fahrenheit 9/11, Where to Invade Next, Sicko). This film looks into the possible influences on the Columbine High School Massacre, which has brought Moore a lot of international recognition and given him the opportunity to attain an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. I will be discussing a societal reading of what could have caused the tragedy of Columbine back in 1999, which these ideas were brought up by Moore in this film. The main ideas this

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    “downward social mobility is movement down the social class ladder” (p.237).A good of example of this in the movie was when Michael Moore mentioned in the beginning of the movie that everyone in Flint worked for GM. Many parents or grandparents that retired from GM were middle class citizens, but the current generation that was laid off had become lower class citizens. Michaels’ High School classmate said, he wanted something of his own but it doesn’t look like that would happen for him, in Flint.

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    Michael Moore’s Bowling for Columbine (2002) is a documentary exploring America’s predilection for gun violence with a focus on the Columbine High School massacre of 1999. Moore investigates the background and environment where the massacre took place. Additionally, the documentary presents common public opinions and assumptions about related issues. Within the documentary, Moore uses archival footage of gun violence, pro-gun and anti-gun rallies, and news media footage – often with this being expressed

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    and narrated by Michael Moore. Moore has won numerous awards including the Academy Award for best documentary feature. The film explores acts of violence with guns and the primary causes for the Columbine School Massacre, where two students shot and killed thirteen people and injured twenty-one others. Bowling for Columbine takes a deep and often disturbing probe into what the motives may have been for the shooters and investigates other gun-related issues along the way. Moore explores different

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    The Documentary Bowling for Columbine by Michael Moore produced in 2002 focuses on American gun culture and how impacting it is to not only America but also the world. Moore uses this documentary as a ploy to persuade viewers of his viewpoint that gun laws should be outlawed in America by using various techniques such as selection of detail, audio, visuals and facts and statistics. . It was produced three years after the Columbine school shooting in 1999 and this adds to his argument. Throughout

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    have a very prominent place in US society. Despite what one’s opinion might be in regards to gun control or gun safety, gun culture is something very powerful and something to be addressed for Americans. In the documentary Bowling for Columbine, Michael Moore discusses this very issue. By traveling the the United States as well as Canada, he pieces together America’s fascination with guns and how it relates to tragedies like that of the Columbine shooting, and many others. In other words, Moore’s Bowling

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    imperfections? Taking the point of view of the ordinary man, Moore looks at how unchecked capitalism has alterred his path to self-attainment--leading to job and income loss, foreclosures, and the like. Washington, D.C. should have answers, but all he finds there are deceit and backstabbing. Its certainly a criticism of over-consumption, but satirically told. We take messages like this more to heart if told with a sense of humor. Moore slices through everything--home evictions, greedy real estate

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    for another day at school. And out in a little town in Colorado, two boys went bowling at six in the morning. Yes, it was a typical day in the United States of America.’ (Narrator 2002) In the documentary ‘Bowling For Columbine’ the director, Michael Moore uses a variety of techniques to position the audience to accept the dominant reading that America is gun crazy and a violent history begets violence. Paragraph 1: The film begins with a representative of the national rifle association talking

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    for Columbine." I can't call it a good movie just because I agree with most of what Moore has to say. But I can say it's a movie every American should see. Repeatedly, he returns to the issue of fear in the movie, claiming that excessive coverage of gun violence by the media makes Americans scared of each other and therefore more violent. This circular argument doesn't make any sense either. On the one hand, Moore has made an entire film purporting to investigate why the U.S. has the highest rate

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