Last point first. My take on the cartoon history of the KKK and the NRA was that it was meant to be illustrative and amusing only, in exactly the same way as the cartoon characters themselves. At the very least, it came with its own bucket of salt, and even I wasn't dumb enough to accept it as irrefutable fact!DaChew said:THAT depends on what type of documentary you are trying to make. Moore's piece is CLEARLY edited in a way that implies a pure time-line event. Also, you can't "document" (why are we using quotes?) something that didn't happen. That's called lying.
The film was presented as a documentary. It has won an award as a documentary. I don't think it's unreasonable to point out the falsehoods in it to those who don't think of it as only entertainment. There are people on this very board who thought Moore's cartoon concerning the Klan and the NRA was factual. You say below that Moore was holding up a mirror to his own culture. But a mirror only reflects what is actually there. It doesn't create it's own images.
First point: Is strict chronology all that necessary in putting points across where the chronological sequence is not really relevant? I don't think Moore intended that the storyline was to be chronological - the Columbine video was effectively a flashback. Only some sections were in sequence, others obviously were not. I took no exception to the fact they weren't - I was concentrating more on the broader point-by-point arguments (which I have a few gripes with too, btw).
Lying. OK, one example. It was revealed that Moore set up the bank beforehand to give him the gun (there was apparently some additional checking done that wasn't shown in the film, it took a few days instead of minutes, etc). Lying by omission, technically. But Moore's salient point remains in my mind: Doesn't it sound silly/odd that a bank is giving it's customers rifles as a reward for opening an account? Like giving Dracula the keys to the blood-bank? Does no-one see the irony? And does that technical lie really matter in the face of that?
A mirror can be used selectively to show only what it wants to reveal, of course!