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Fahrenheit 9/11
15 Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004)

updated 08 July 2004
reviewer's rating
5 out of 5
Reviewed by Jamie Russell
average user rating
4 Star


Director
Michael Moore
Writer
Michael Moore
Stars
Michael Moore
Length
122 minutes
Distributor
Optimum Releasing
Cinema
09 July 2004
Country
USA
Genre
Documentary
Web Links
Official site


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Average star rating: 4 from 3289 votes

If 2004 is the year of the documentary, Michael Moore's Palme d'Or-winning Fahrenheit 9/11 is undoubtedly doc of the year. A two-hour demolition of the Bush administration's failings - from the electoral chaos of 2000, to the handling of 9/11, bombing of Afghanistan, and invasion of Iraq - it's a bloated, biased, and utterly brilliant piece of political filmmaking. It's also the film the powers-that-be didn't want you to see - an incendiary, raging epic that will do more to scupper George Bush's re-election hopes than anything the Democrats could dream up.

No even-handed debate, Fahrenheit 9/11 is a poleaxe polemic that sees Moore pulling no punches in his shamelessly simple, partisan aim: to expose the Bush administration as a gang of thieves whose underhand business dealings have led America into a trumped-up war. Bullish and unstoppable, the comedian-turned-activist "oaf savant" ploughs through (by now possibly) familiar territory, condensing the tangled web of the Bush family's business links - to the Taliban, the Bin Laden family, and corporations like Haliburton - into bite-sized chunks.

"BUSH WILL WEEP WHEN HE SEES IT"

The comedy is devastatingly effective: the Iraq invasion replayed as Bonanza; Bush stumbling over his lines; Moore following a pair of Marine Corps recruiters. Yet where Moore's blatantly populist film succeeds is in its raw, horrific power. Limiting the grandstanding stunts he used in Bowling For Columbine to just a few choice segments (like hiring an ice cream van to circle Washington reading the Patriot Act to America's congressmen), Moore lets his compilation of archival footage do the majority of the talking.

Gruelling images of injured Iraqi children (their wounds shown in graphic close-ups never seen on the television news), civilian napalm victims whose skin has been completely melted, and the sheer despair of bereaved mothers (both American and Iraqi) will reduce you to tears more than once. President Bush will no doubt weep too when he sees it - though, one suspects, for very different reasons.

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