U.S. critics laud Moore film (Agencies) Updated: 2004-06-25 11:12 US critics have applauded
Michael Moore's anti-George W. Bush documentary Fahrenheit 9/11, praising its
scathing humour while voicing some reservations about the director's methods.
 Michael Moore's anti-Iraq war crusade is not
stopping with President Bush as the filmmaker says he now wants to make a
movie about British Prime Minister Tony Blair's role in the war. Moore,
director of the controversial documentary which last month won top prize
at the Cannes film festival, said on Friday that he now wants to take a
close look at the British leader's role in backing the war in Iraq and
sending troops into harm's way. Moore is shown at the Cannes Film
Festival, May 23. [Reuters] | The first
reviews hit the press yesterday as rival political activists mobilised to either
boycott the film or turn out in droves for its US-wide opening today.
"Informative, provocative, frightening, compelling, funny, manipulative and,
most of all, entertaining," USA Today declared in a gushing review of Moore's
polemic against the US President and the war in Iraq.
"Fahrenheit 9/11 is the year's must-see film," the US's biggest-circulation
daily added, while questioning whether its unabashed bias would do anything to
change voters' minds in a polarised electorate.
While acknowledging that Moore's latest piece of agitprop, which won the
Palme D'Or at the Cannes film festival, could be "nitpicked and second guessed",
The Los Angeles Times labelled it an "overwhelming film" and "a landmark in
American filmmaking (that) demands to be seen".
"It is propaganda, no doubt about it, but propaganda is most effective when
it has elements of truth, and too much here is taken from the record not to have
a devastating effect on viewers."
The New Yorker magazine found the film "incendiary and viciously funny" and
"Moore's most powerful movie – the largest in scope, the most resourceful and
skillful in means."
But it also questioned Moore's objectivity and his method of deluging the
audience with allegations that are often difficult to sort out and evaluate.
"Fahrenheit 9/11 offers the thrill of a coherent explanation for everything,
but parts of the movie are no better than a wild, lunging grab at a supposed
master plan," the magazine said.
Moore has made no bones about his motive for making the film. "I would like
to see Mr Bush removed from the White House," he said last
week.
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