Capitalism: A Love Story

2009 left-wing propaganda

Rating: 16/20 (Jen: 14/20)

Plot: Some tubby guy whines about how capitalism only works for people willing to take advantage of the system in evil ways at the expense of the people it won't work for.

I wept seven different times last week for a variety of reasons, and one of those times was during this movie.
Michael Moore manipulates, delivering his messages in cutesy ways and more often than not coming across like a snarky panda. That's what he is actually. He's Propaganda Panda, unprofessional even because he wears that baseball cap. But here, he's nothing but right, and this documentary is an often surprisingly moving experience. Capitalism has the devastation, hope, and humor present in Moore's best work. And there sure is a lot of information packed into this, enough that I could see somebody arguing that it's all unfocused and sloppy. But with the exception of some interviews with priests and some silly shots of cats flushing toilets, all of these parts are important in building the whole, and that whole is something that every American should probably see. And not just the filthy liberals who voted that socialist we've currently got in the White House either as Moore has made a movie for the demos in our democracy. Even if viewers aren't moved to do anything, they're getting a good story. There's good vs. evil and tons of plot twists. There's even a hint of a terrifying unhappy ending at the beginning of Moore's film when he juxtaposes shots from modern times with what looks to be a film strip about the fall of Rome. Solid stuff. Thanks, Propaganda Panda!

I tried to get Jen to write a guest review, and she refused. She did criticize Moore for wasting film time with gimmicks. She wanted more substance and less Propaganda Panda, I guess.

1 comment:

  1. I really wanted to recommend this to you, but I have tried to minimize how many overtly political films I try to get you to watch. I was very excited to see that you had watched it, though.

    It is gimmicky and occasionally heavy-handed. It also gets people's attention. This film is entertaining, informative, and enraging. Love him or hate him, Michael Moore at his best is a genius at making political (yes, propoganda) films, and I am glad he is out there doing what no one else is, but should be.

    There are 20 things I loved about this movie, but the thing that struck me hardest was seeing a few non-corrupt Congresspeople really speaking for the American people, especially Marcy Kaptur D-OH (to quote one of my favorite Shane-isms, "fist pumps may have been involved"). I also loved the jumping-dog-at-the-table analogy.

    For anyone who is politically open-minded, I can't recommend this film too highly. An 18.

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