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Michael Moore Movies

    • Capitalism: A Love Story

      (2009) R

      Directed by: Michael Moore

      Overview: Michael Moore explores the economic meltdown and the bailout of private financial institutions.

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    • Sicko

      (2007) PG-13

      Directed by: Michael Moore

      Overview: Filmmaker Michael Moore diagnoses the malady within the American health-care system.

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Michael Moore Movie News

Thursday, October 1

  • Capitalism: A Love Story Offers Free Screenings for Homeless and Jobless

    Capitalism: A Love StoryFollowing a very successful initial opening at only four screens last weekend, Michael Moore's latest documentary Capitalism: A Love Story debuts on more than 1,000 screens across the U.S. this Friday. Moore has also gotten the studio to agree to offer free screenings tonight in select cities for those hardest hit by the financial crisis:

    To kick off the national release of Capitalism: A Love Story. I've asked the studio to offer a number of screenings in the nation's hardest hit cities — the ones with the highest unemployment rates and highest foreclosure rates — where those who've lost their jobs or who are in foreclosure (or have already been evicted) may attend my film free of charge. They've agreed, and so tonight (Thursday), the night before our opening day, ten cities will grant you free admission if you have fallen on hard times.... You don't need to bring any "proof" of your situation — just show up — it's the honor system, no questions asked.

    A publicity stunt, no doubt, but one definitely in the spirit of the message he is trying to get across.


    Posted 10/01/2009 by Bill

    Related: Michael F Moore | Capitalism: A Love Story

Thursday, September 24

  • Previews of What to Expect in Capitalism: A Love Story

    Capitalism: A Love StoryCall it good timing, but Michael Moore's latest guerilla documentary Capitalism: A Love Story really seems to have struck a nerve. Early reviews have been surprisingly good. It's currently polling 82% at Rotten Tomatoes and a number of critics largely predisposed against Moore are finding at least something to like about the movie. Even the self-described "resident Republican and lifelong capitalist" over at AICN, angered by the bi-partisan shenanigans that precipitated the global financial crisis, is calling it an important work and urging everyone to see it.

    Like all of Moore's movies though, it's a complex beast and has some radically different parts that may have turned out better than the whole. That at least is the assessment of a reviewer at the Los Angeles Times who has provided a useful guide to some of the highlights. These include segments dealing with:

    * The scandal surrounding a for-profit juvenile detention center in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., in which two judges got millions of dollars in kickbacks from the owners for sending more than a thousand juveniles to the establishment.

    * The little-noticed portion of the congressional testimony of Chesley B. "Sully" Sullenberger III, the US Airways pilot who miraculously landed his plane on New York's Hudson River, who told legislators that his pay has been cut 40% in recent years and his pension terminated.

    * The strategy of major firms to take out life insurance policies on their employees — known in the trade as "dead peasant insurance" — that pays off to the companies, not to the employees' survivors.

    In addition, of course, there is the recovered footage of Franklin Roosevelt delivering a call for "a second bill of rights" that everyone is talking about. And for a more graphic preview, the studio has released a a (mostly) new batch of clips to help you judge for yourself.


    Posted 09/24/2009 by Bill

    Related: Michael F Moore | Capitalism: A Love Story

Friday, September 18

  • Michael Moore Digs Up Presidential Footage for Capitalism: A Love Story

    Capitalism: A Love StoryThe title Capitalism: A Love Story is clearly ironic. Michael Moore's latest documentary is a no-holds-barred polemic against the people and institutions that precipitated the current global financial meltdown. As Moore explained during a recent appearance on The Jay Leno Show, he views capitalism as "legalized greed" and is just as willing to go after sold-out Democrats as sold-out Republicans in his search for culprits. Even Obama isn't necessarily exempt.

    Along the way though, Moore has assembled an impressive collection of footage, some of which is likely to draw genuinely widespread appreciation. His biggest coup is the discovery of a previously unknown newsreel of Franklin Roosevelt proposing a second bill of rights to protect the middle class. The filmmaker is clearly proud of his find:

    The Roosevelt footage, no one's ever seen that, it was lost. The Roosevelt family told us it didn't exist. We found it in South Carolina, buried, totally buried. Now they have it in the presidential library.

    Other historical footage shown in the movie is less flattering, though, such as an assemblage of clips documenting the close ties of the Reagan White House to Merrill Lynch. Announcing that you are planning to "turn the bull loose" just doesn't play as well now as it did back in the day.


    Posted 09/18/2009 by Bill

    Related: Michael F Moore | Capitalism: A Love Story

Friday, August 21

  • Stalking the Financial Giants for Capitalism: A Love Story

    The real trailer for Michael Moore's Capitalism: A Love Story is finally out after an early tease that was more joke than preview. The trailer comes off pretty much as you'd expect, with Moore attempting a citizen's arrest of the AIG Board of Directors and addressing embarrassing questions to the financial powers that be. In between we get snippets about the human fallout from all the high-flying financial speculation. Overall, it seems to be pretty much the same type kind the comic expose of profiteering and exploitation that he's been doing since Roger and Me (1989). The trick, of course, is that like Sacha Baron Cohen, he's become so well-known by now that it's getting harder and harder for him to effectively ambush his targets.

    Moore acknowledged the difficulty in an interview with the Hollywood Reporter, explaining that he had to be "extremely dodgy" in dealing with these corporate guys. During the early stages of making the documentary, he was publicly describing the project as a follow-up to Fahrenheit 9/11, with a more political than financial focus. In fact, he says, that was just a cover story. He intended it to be about the financial system all along, even though they started filming before the real crisis hit. The dramatic collapse at the end of last year just brought his targets into much sharper focus.


    Posted 08/21/2009 by Bill

    Related: Michael F Moore | Fahrenheit 9/11 | Capitalism: A Love Story | Roger & Me

Tuesday, August 18

  • Capitalism: A Love Story Aims to Cover All the Bases
    Capitalism: A Love Story

    We still haven't seen a proper trailer for Michael Moore's new documentary Capitalism: A Love Story. Asking for handouts for beleaguered CEO's, while amusing, doesn't really count. Still, it's pretty clear that it will deal with the roots of the current economic crisis in a signature Moore fashion.

    Without getting too much into the details, Moore went a little further, telling Entertainment Weekly that the movie aims to stitch together a bewildering array of genres:

    It's a crime story ... But it's also a war story about class warfare. And a vampire movie, with the upper 1 percent feeding off the rest of us. And, of course, it's also a love story. Only it's about an abusive relationship ...

    He goes on to describe this movie as the culmination of his life's work:

    It's not about an individual, like [former GM CEO] Roger Smith, or a corporation, or even an issue, like health care," he says. "This is the big enchilada. This is about the thing that dominates all our lives — the economy. I made this movie as if it was going to be the last movie I was allowed to make.

    Careful to allay concerns that he might be getting too serious or too boring, he concludes with a reminder that it's a comedy too.


    Posted 08/18/2009 by Bill

    Related: Michael F Moore | Capitalism: A Love Story

Tuesday, June 16

Monday, June 15

  • 10 Title Suggestions for Michael Moore's Upcoming Documentary

    Michael Moore Michael Moore released a teaser trailer for his upcoming movie last week, and this past weekend solicited theater audiences to give generously to the CEOs and corporations who helped cause the current financial crisis.

    The movie, due in theaters on October 2, still doesn't have a name. Being generous souls, we took it upon ourselves to help Moore out with suggestions for his "untitled Michael Moore project."

    • Bernie (Madoff) and Me

    • Bowling for Billions

    • Michael Moore Pretends He's Not Rich

    • What Those Fat Cats on Wall Street Don't Want You to Know

    • Michael Moore's New Moon

    • Large and In Charge

    • RiCHO

    • The Significantly Bigger One

    • The Cat in the Teamsters' Hat

    • Michael Moore Rants and Raves About Corporations, or Something, for 1.5 Hours

    Got a title suggestion of your own? Use the Comments area below to add it to the list.


    Michael Moore Takes on Wall Street - Teaser

    A new documentary about the U.S. economy

    Posted 06/15/2009 by reelz

    Related: Michael F Moore | Capitalism: A Love Story

Saturday, June 13

  • Michael Moore's "Save the CEOs" Trailer

    It was supposed to be a trailer for his upcoming and as yet untitled movie about the current financial crisis. Instead, what audiences got was a clip of Michael Moore begging for money to help out our ailing financial giants. And the punch line:

    Now, I know what you're thinking — I already gave at the bailout. And I know you did, but even if you've given in the past, give some more. It will make you feel … good.

    Nicely delivered and definitely making his point at a gut level. The trailer/pitch was made at select theaters in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Washington DC. He actually had ushers go down the aisles to see if anyone would donate, prompting hoots and applause from the audience. The real trailer for his movie, which is due in theaters October 2, 2009, is expected soon.


    Posted 06/13/2009 by Bill

    Related: Michael F Moore | Capitalism: A Love Story

Friday, June 12

  • Oliver Stone Talks Wall Street Sequel, First Image from Michael Moore's Real-Life Counterpart

    With the economy in a shambles, the timing seems perfect for filmmakers, both fiction and non-fiction, to move forward with projects that tackle both the dramatic elements and the moral implications of Wall Street's activities.

    Oliver StoneOliver Stone is currently at work on a sequel to Wall Street, his award-winning 1987 movie about a naive young broker (played by Charlie Sheen) who gets taken under the wing of the monstrous bigwig Gordon "Greed Is Good" Gekko (played by Michael Douglas). Douglas went on to win an Oscar for his performance, and to many audiences, Gekko remains one of the most vile-yet-charismatic villains ever portrayed on screen.

    Thankfully, Douglas is on board for the sequel, which is tentatively titled Money Never Sleeps. Also confirmed are Shia LaBeouf and Javier Bardem in unspecified roles. The plot reportedly has Gekko being released from prison into a broken market, caused in part by more than 20 years of avarice on the Wall Street so familiar to him.

    In a recent interview with Variety, Stone spoke about Gekko, who he expects will still be "a larger-than-life character" to audiences:

    Like Tony Montana [in Brian De Palma's Scarface], even 20 years later, I get more reactions to him than most characters in my films.

    Stone also talked about the relationship between Michael Douglas and his character, and also the way Gekko will fit into the sequel:

    The consistency between Gordon Gekko and Michael Douglas was in their charisma and passion, except that Gekko's motives were malevolent. But both are survivors — men who find a way to succeed, who have willed themselves to second acts in their lives. Here's a guy who fell from grace but never lost his ambition and voracity for success. He's a quintessentially American story. And seeing how he manages to survive in this new shark tank 22 years later is a fascinating and challenging proposition. So much has changed. Not just Gordon Gekko. The world, too.

    Michael MooreWhile we wait for Money Never Sleeps, due out in February, we can turn to Michael Moore for a non-fiction version of sorts. His latest project focuses on the recent collapse of the global market and the greed that accelerated its demise. Originally, Moore talked about doing a sequel to Fahrenheit 9/11, but with Bush out of office and the economy in its worst shape since the early '80s, a change of focus seemed appropriate.

    Last night, USA Today posted excerpts from an interview with Moore along with a new image from the movie. Moore says he's not as interested in being informative as he is in showing the absurdities of Wall Street's behavior:

    The movie is not going to be an economics lesson; it's going to be more like a vampire movie. Instead of the main characters feasting on the blood of their victims, they feast on the money. And they never seem to get enough of it.

    If nothing else, the movie should offer a welcome chance for people to collectively exorcise a lot of pent up anger and frustration.


    Posted 06/12/2009 by Rich Z

    Related: Javier Bardem | Michael Douglas | Oliver Stone | Charlie Sheen | Shia LaBeouf | Michael F Moore | Wall Street | Capitalism: A Love Story | Money Never Sleeps

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