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  #1  
Old May 18, 2004, 02:07 PM
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Default Which side are you on?

US film-maker Michael Moore's conflict with his country's government has led to suggestions that he is unpatriotic. He is not the first American artist to face the charge.

Moore says the White House tried to block his film Fahrenheit 9/11, which is critical of the Bush administration and its role in foreign affairs after 11 September.

Moore's allegation in front of the world's media at Cannes - which has received no response from the White House - has renewed the ire of his opponents who say he is anti-American.

In being critical of the government of the day, he belongs to a long tradition of US writers, directors, musicians and comics who have been castigated for a perceived lack of patriotism.

During the early 1950s, at the height of the Cold War, a host of Hollywood actors directors, producers and writers were hauled before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC).

The so-called witch-hunt, part of Senator Joseph McCarthy's crusade against alleged communists in government and public life, became known as McCarthyism.


Moore has been an outspoken critic of President Bush

Its targets included On The Waterfront director Elia Kazan, who gave eight names to the committee, and screenwriter Arthur Miller, who was blacklisted by Hollywood when he refused to testify.

Chaplin probe

As far back as the 1920s, British-born comic acting legend Charlie Chaplin was under investigation by the FBI seeking evidence of his supposed Communist sympathies, although none was ever found.

In the 1960s, Barbarella actor Jane Fonda led Hollywood's contingent of left-leaning liberal artists who openly opposed the Vietnam war, earning herself the nickname Hanoi Jane.

The anti-war tradition in Hollywood has remained, with outspoken opposition against US involvement in Iraq from actors such as Sean Penn, Susan Sarandon, Martin Sheen and Danny Glover.

Musicians have also had their say. Folk singer Woody Guthrie's most famous song, This Land Is Your Land, written in 1940, was inspired in part by his dislike of Irving Berlin's God Bless America, which he considered an unrealistic portrayal of US life.


The Dixie Chicks outraged some US citizens with an anti-Bush comment

Guthrie, an ardent political activist born of the Depression, was blacklisted in the 1950s, and declared: "I ain't a Communist necessarily, but I been in the red all my life."

John Lennon was reputedly put under government surveillance over his political activism after his move to New York in 1971.

His efforts to become a US citizen were allegedly hampered as the authorities repeatedly sought his deportation.

Country dispute

Two years ago, country artist Steve Earle was attacked for his song John Walker's Blues, about John Walker Lindh, a converted US Muslim who pleaded guilty to aiding the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

In one verse Earle sings, "I'm just an American boy, raised on MTV, And I've seen all the kids in the soda pop bands, but none of them look like me".

Some commentators in Nashville, the traditional home of country, branded the song unpatriotic. Nashville radio talk show host Steve Gill said "it celebrates and glorifies a traitor to this country".

More recently, country music stations pulled the Dixie Chicks' music after singer Natalie Maines said she was ashamed that President Bush hailed from Texas.

'Citizenship'

Stand-up comedian Bill Hicks, who died in 1994 aged 32, became a fierce critic of the first US-led war in the Gulf war, as well as America's growing corporate influence on the world economy.

Thirty years earlier, comic Lenny Bruce became the subject of FBI scrutiny for his revolutionary style of humour which satirised the hypocrisies of American life.

Dr Joanne Mancini, lecturer in American history at Sussex University, said unlike many other anti-government US artists, Michael Moore was promoting the idea of citizenship.


John Lennon was reputedly investigated by the FBI during the 1970s

"He seems to be bringing back a 19th Century tradition in American culture," she said, "fusing the idea of citizenship with the need to criticise the failures of government.

"In a way he is part of a much longer tradition of the US of defining patriotism in terms of the willingness to look into the dark side of American politics, and to confront it and pursue a different path."

-Source: BBC

[Edited on 18-5-2004 by reverse_swing]
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  #2  
Old May 18, 2004, 02:39 PM
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Orpheus Orpheus is offline
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[Edited on 18-5-2004 by Orpheus : actually no]
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  #3  
Old May 18, 2004, 09:56 PM
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[Edited on 6-9-2004 by Nascer]
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  #4  
Old May 18, 2004, 10:21 PM
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i've seen one film by micheal moore "bowling for columbine".

without going into the content, i can say this much, he knows how to make documentary. i never found a documentary which is not a replacement of sleeping pill, except this one. and he works hard to do it. second, he has courage. bush will not be able to stop him unless using "background" force.

and going into the content: i learned from a serian girl that the info given about bombing serian hospital was wrong. other than that, its a excellent piece of work and a must see for anyone who cares.
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  #5  
Old May 18, 2004, 10:45 PM
fab fab is offline
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Quote:
and going into the content: i learned from a serian girl that the info given about bombing serian hospital was wrong. other than that, its a excellent piece of work and a must see for anyone who cares.
I haven't seen it, as to me it is pretty self evident that America's gun culture sux. I'm not picking on your spelling or anything, but do you mean Serbian or Syrian? What did he say about it?
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  #6  
Old May 19, 2004, 01:19 AM
acker acker is offline
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I heard on Australian media that a exerpt from the documentary delves into the "42" weekday's (not including weekends) that George W Bush had taken as holidays between his innaugeration ( around January I presume , I am only an aussie so someone from the US please enlighten me ) and 9/11/01.
Campaigning must be so exhuasting
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  #7  
Old May 19, 2004, 06:15 AM
oracle oracle is offline
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Quote:
i've seen one film by micheal moore "bowling for columbine".
Yes, he makes excellent documentaries. And whatever happened to Oliver stone?
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  #8  
Old May 19, 2004, 11:41 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by fab
Quote:
and going into the content: i learned from a serian girl that the info given about bombing serian hospital was wrong. other than that, its a excellent piece of work and a must see for anyone who cares.
I haven't seen it, as to me it is pretty self evident that America's gun culture sux. I'm not picking on your spelling or anything, but do you mean Serbian or Syrian? What did he say about it?
its Syrian, sorry.
it was something like he was showing american presidents talking about peace in one short scene, and jumping to a stat of american solder bombing/ killing. one of them were, they bombed an syrian hospital that killed many children and sick people. but she said it was not true. no idea, which one is right.
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