The Guardian July 7, 2004


My First Wild Week with Fahrenheit 9/11

Michael Moore Sunday, July 4th, 2004

Where do I begin? This past week has knocked me for a loop. 
Fahrenheit 9/11, the #1 movie in the country, the largest 
grossing documentary ever. My head is spinning. Didn't we just 
lose our distributor eight weeks ago? Did Karl Rove really fail 
to stop this? Is Bush packing?

Each day this week I was given a new piece of information from 
the press that covers Hollywood, and I barely had time to recover 
from the last tidbit before the next one smacked me upside the 
head: 

* More people saw Fahrenheit 9/11 in one weekend than all 
the people who saw Bowling for Columbine in 9 months.

* Fahrenheit 9/11 broke Rocky III's record for the 
biggest box office opening weekend ever for any film that opened 
in less than a thousand theatres.

* Fahrenheit 9/11 beat the opening weekend of Return of 
the Jedi.

* Fahrenheit 9/11 instantly went to #2 on the all-time 
list for largest per-theatre average ever for a film that opened 
in wide-release.

How can I ever thank all of you who went to see it? These records 
are mind-blowing. They have sent shock waves through Hollywood — 
and, more importantly, through the White House.

But it didn't just stop there. The response to the movie then 
went into the Twilight Zone. Surfing through the dial I landed on 
the Fox broadcasting network which was airing the NASCAR race 
live last Sunday to an audience of millions of Americans — and 
suddenly the announcers were talking about how NASCAR champ Dale 
Earnhardt, Jr took his crew to see Fahrenheit 9/11 the 
night before.

FOX sportscaster Chris Myers delivered Earnhardt's review 
straight out of his mouth and into the heartland of America: "He 
said hey, it'll be a good bonding experience no matter what your 
political belief. It's a good thing as an American to go see." 
Whoa! NASCAR fans — you can't go deeper into George Bush 
territory than that! White House moving vans — START YOUR 
ENGINES!

Then there was Roger Friedman from the Fox News Channel giving 
our film an absolutely glowing review, calling it "a really 
brilliant piece of work, and a film that members of all political 
parties should see without fail".

Richard Goldstein of the Village Voice surmised that Bush 
is already considered a goner so Rupert Murdoch might be starting 
to curry favour with the new administration. I don't know about 
that, but I've never heard a decent word toward me from Fox. So, 
after I was revived, I wondered if a love note to me from Sean 
Hannity was next.

How about Letterman's Top Ten List?

Stunned, weeping, questioning

But it was the reactions and reports we received from theatres 
around the country that really sent me over the edge. One theatre 
manager after another phoned in to say that the movie was getting 
standing ovations as the credits rolled — in places like 
Greensboro, North Carolina and Oklahoma City — and that they 
were having a hard time clearing the theatre afterwards because 
people were either too stunned or they wanted to sit and talk to 
their neighbours about what they had just seen.

In Trumbull, Connecticut, one woman got up on her seat after the 
movie and shouted "Let's go have a meeting!" A man in San 
Francisco took his shoe off and threw it at the screen when Bush 
appeared at the end. Ladies' church groups in Tulsa were going to 
see it, and weeping afterwards.

Newspaper after newspaper wrote stories in tones of breathless 
disbelief about people who called themselves "Independents" and 
"Republicans" walking out of the movie theatre shaken and in 
tears, proclaiming that they could not, in good conscience, vote 
for George W Bush.

The New York Times wrote of a conservative Republican 
woman in her 20s in Pensacola, Florida who cried through the 
film, and told the reporter: "It really makes me question what I 
feel about the president... it makes me question his motives."

Newsday reported on a self-described "ardent Bush/Cheney 
supporter" who went to see the film on Long Island, and his quiet 
reaction afterwards. He said, "It's really given me pause to 
think about what's really going on. There was just too much — 
too much to discount." The man then bought three more tickets for 
another showing of the film.

The Los Angeles Times found a mother who had "supported 
[Bush] fiercely" at a theatre in Des Peres, Missouri: "Emerging 
from Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11, her eyes wet, Leslie 
Hanser said she at last understood. 'My emotions are just....' 
She trailed off, waving her hands to show confusion. 'I feel like 
we haven't seen the whole truth before'".

All of this had to be the absolute worst news for the White House 
to wake up to on Monday morning. I guess they were in such a 
stupor, they "gave" Iraq back to, um, Iraq two days early!

White House spinning

News editors told us that they were being "bombarded" with e-
mails and calls from the White House (read: Karl Rove), trying to 
spin their way out of this mess by attacking it and attacking me. 
Bush spokesman Dan Bartlett had told the White House press corps 
that the movie was "outrageously false" — even though he said he 
hadn't seen the movie.

He later told CNN that "This is a film that doesn't require us to 
actually view it to know that it's filled with factual 
inaccuracies". At least they're consistent. They never needed to 
see a single weapon of mass destruction before sending our kids 
off to die.

Many news shows were more than eager to buy the White House spin. 
After all, that is a big part of what Fahrenheit is about 
— how the lazy, compliant media bought all the lies from the 
Bush administration about the need to invade Iraq. They took the 
Kool-Aid offered by the White House and rarely, if ever, did our 
media ask the hard questions that needed to be asked before the 
war started.

Because the movie "outs" the mainstream media for their failures 
and their complicity with the Bush administration — who can ever 
forget their incessant, embarrassing cheerleading as the troops 
went off to war, as though it was all just a game — the media 
was not about to let me get away with anything now resembling a 
cultural phenomenon.

On show after show, they went after me with the kind of 
viciousness you would have hoped they had had for those who were 
lying about the necessity for invading a sovereign nation that 
was no threat to us. I don't blame our well-paid celebrity 
journalists — they look like a bunch of ass-kissing dopes in my 
movie, and I guess I'd be pretty mad at me, too. After all, once 
the NASCAR fans see Fahrenheit 9/11, will they ever 
believe a single thing they see on ABC/NBC/CBS news again?

Absolute, irrefutable truth

Every single fact I state in Fahrenheit 9/11 is the 
absolute and irrefutable truth. This movie is perhaps the most 
thoroughly researched and vetted documentary of our time. No 
fewer than a dozen people, including three teams of lawyers and 
the venerable one-time fact-checkers from The New Yorker 
went through this movie with a fine-tooth comb so that we can 
make this guarantee to you.

Do not let anyone say this or that isn't true. If they say that, 
they are lying. Let them know that the OPINIONS in the film are 
mine, and anyone certainly has a right to disagree with them. And 
the questions I pose in the movie, based on these irrefutable 
facts, are also mine. And I have a right to ask them. And I will 
continue to ask them until they are answered.

In closing, let me say that the most heartening response to the 
film has come from our soldiers and their families. Theatres in 
military towns across the country reported packed houses. Our 
troops know the truth. They have seen it first-hand. And many of 
them could not believe that here was a movie that was TRULY on 
their side — the side of bringing them home alive and never 
sending them into harm's way again unless it's the absolute last 
resort.

Thank you again, all of you, for your support. Together we did 
something for the history books. My apologies to Return of the 
Jedi. We'll make it up by producing "Return of the Texan to 
Crawford" in November.

May the farce be with you, but not for long,

* * *
For more heart-rending stories of the response to the film, visit Michael Moore's site at http://www.michaelmoore.com and click onto latest news, July 2, 2004.

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