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Scots, man, I likes you more and more.
Perdita
Perdita

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perdita said:Colly, if it were anyone else I'd say you being condescending, but I know you aren't. I very much appreciate the art of Griffiths and Riefenstal (sp.?), have yet to make up my mind about Moore.
Thanks for your wishes. P.![]()
Ha ha, I'll give everyone my opinion. I can't speak as well about Leni R. (though she did create beauty out of evil). But D.W. Griffiths was film's first genius. He actually created (invented) film technique that everyone takes for granted now. He made an art out of what before had been a craft.Colleen Thomas said:If it isn't too much trouble, I would really like to know your opinion on his skill after you have seen the movie.

perdita said:Ha ha, I'll give everyone my opinion. I can't speak as well about Leni R. (though she did create beauty out of evil). But D.W. Griffiths was film's first genius. He actually created (invented) film technique that everyone takes for granted now. He made an art out of what before had been a craft.
anon, Perdita![]()
I agree. She was that rare thing, an artist first. I won't judge her but it seems to me she used Hitler for her art, as he used her art for his own ends. There is a very good doc. on her, probably available to rent on dvd; books too, I just haven't the time to learn more about her. P.Colleen Thomas said:Leni was perhaps the best ever at incorporating nationalistic propaganda into works that are now considered classics of the propagandist's art. I have studied Nazi propaganda and ever and again she is mentioned as a master of it. Often portrayed as the antithesis of clumsy people like Geobles & Stricher.
Pure said:Colly said, of Moore's film
Moore is scathing. Not factually correct, but scathing.
Perhaps you could furnish us unwashed with a short list, of
5-6 'factual errors' of the film.
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Colleen Thomas said:Dita,
Watch his films. Enjoy them for whatever art you find within them. Just remember, you are watching a propaganda film, purely and simply. No better or worse than The Birth of a Nation, Olympia or Triumph of Will. It is a cinematic expression of a political agenda.
-Colly
shereads said:Birth of a Nation is a work of fiction with a script. I haven't seen more than a few clips of Leni R's films, so I can't speak with any authority about her. But I've been a follower of Moore's since "Roger & Me" and his television show. The power of his work is not its "artistry" but his restraint. Yes, it's propoganda in that it's edited, and he adds commentary. But the most powerful scenes in "Columbine" and "Roger & Me" are the moments of pure documentary, when he refrains from commenting and lets the scene speak for itself.
In "Roger & Me," the story of Flint, Michigan after the automakers outsourced thousands of jobs to Mexico, the most memorable moment takes place on a country club golf course, where Moore asks a socialite to comment on unemployment in Flint.
Without irony, she says, "Why don't those people stop complaining, and just get other jobs?" Then she takes her golf swing.
That moment foreshadows the clip from "Farenheit 911" that was shown on Letterman Friday night: George W. Bush is on the golf course, talking to someone who's holding a camera: "I call on all the world leaders to help fight the war on terror. We've got to get rid of these terrorists." He gives a little smirk and adds, "Now watch this swing."
The absurdity of that moment requires no comment, nor does Moore give any.
We're shown propoganda every time we're presented with our scripted, rehearsed president, who has given fewer press conferences than any other president since the advent of broadcast journalism - because his handlers know that the more he talks, the more danger there is that he will reveal the shallow nature of both his thinking and his character. Thank God someone like Moore goes to the trouble to locate and collect these unscripted scenes that show the side of GWB his handlers keep hidden.
Wildcard Ky said:I know I'm repeating myself, but once again I must say that Moore is entitled to make what ever kind of film he likes. I have no problem with that. My problem starts with the term "documentary". To me, a documentary is a fact based piece that should simply show an accurate, unbiased representation of something that has occurred.
Moore admits that he has a bias and an agenda in what he does. Does this not create a conflict with the intended purpose of a "documentary"?
Perdita is looking at art and craft of the movie making. Moore is very good at both. There are some that will go to the movie simply thinking that since it's supposed to be a documentary, they are seeing the complete truth. Moore simply doesn't work that way. His works aren't complete truth, they are spun with an agenda. He admits it, yet still claims it's a documentary.
Shereads: I tried to send a response PM back to you, but your box was full. I'll try again tomorrow.
shereads said:Every documentary film has a point-of-view; that doesn't make it untrue.
Roger & Me showed the closure of the Flint plants from the autoworkers' point of view. Columbine was a look at violence in America. Farenheit 911 is a painstakingly assembled presentation of evidence that has been there for anybody to see, if they bothered to look, to arrive at a conclusion that seems pretty obvious: that Bush/Cheney wanted a war in Iraq, that they used 9/11 to drum up public support, that they successfully diverted attention away from the Saudis, that they had reason to know that Chalabi could not be trusted as an information source but they used him anyway, that they tried to stop the formation of the 911 investigating committee, that they fired people with opposing views instead of listening to them, that they allowed the "outing" of Joseph Wilson's wife when he went to the press with the truth...All of this is documented. For someone to go to the trouble to assemble it in a format that people will watch and understand makes it propoganda?
Colleen Thomas said:He admitted it is assembled with the intention of hurting the Bush administration. If you present facts with an agenda to do harm to someone, you are presenting propaganda. It's no different than Nazi hate propaganda against Jews or Klan hate propaganda against blacks, or Fundamenatalist hate against gays.
The fact that it is dressed up better does not make it any less hateful. The fact that it is presented with intent to harm makes it propaganda in every sense of the word.
-Colly
shereads said:If a black filmmaker assembled a documentary with the intention of hurting the Ku Klux Klan, is that also hate propoganda?
What if a Jewish filmmaker had produced a documentary with the intention of hurting Hitler? Would that be hate propoganda?
By your logic, anyone who presents an unflattering picture of another, even if it is true and if the motive is to prevent the person from doing additional harm, then it qualifies as hate propoganda.
I have studied Nazi propaganda...
Clare Quilty said:My monocle fell out from shock upon reading this. I would have never guessed this in a million years![]()
minsue said:Congratulations, Clare. You have just joined the exlusive club of my ignore list. I think this is the first time that I have ever had 2 people on there at the same time.
You should be so very proud.
