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Bowling for Columbine (2002)
Activist documentarian Michael Moore's interview-laden
film:
- the humorous, animated, 3-minute "A Brief History
of the United States of America" (created in the style of South
Park) narrated by a talking bullet, with its ending image of
a well-armed family: (Narrator:
"And everyone lived happily ever after")
- the scene about North Country (Michigan) Bank and
Trust that offered new customers a firearm for opening up a Weatherby
Certificate of Deposit, with the clerk bragging that they had a locked
vault keeping a supply of at least 500 firearms - the bank was also "a
licensed firearm dealer"; after being presented with his "straightshooter" -
he brought up an ironic question: ("Do you think it's a little
dangerous handing out guns in a bank?")
- the bizarre sequence in which a Michigan State police
officer described a freak accident when a hunter's dog (humorously
dressed up like a hunter with a gun slung onto its back) shot and
wounded its owner in the shin
- interviews with pro-gun advocates, including a group
of members in the Michigan Militia, who spoke about their belief
in owning a gun ("It's an American responsibility to be armed.
If you're not armed, you're not responsible. Who's gonna defend your
kids? The cops? The federal government?..It's your job to defend
you and yours. If you don't do it, you're in derilection of duty,
as an American, period!"), their every-day blue-collar jobs
and the guns they owned in their homes; and ending with a discussion
of their fund-raising 2002 "Militia Babes" calendar
- the unusual segment with James Nichols (brother of
Terry) (the Michigan Militia counted Terry Nichols and Timothy McVeigh
of the Oklahoma City Bombing as members), and Nichols' most surprising
quotes: "When the government turns tyrannical, it's your duty
to overthrow it," "The pen is mightier than the sword,
but you always must keep a sword handy for when the pen fails," "I
sleep with a .44 magnum under my pillow" (proved by a visit
to his bedroom) and "There's wackos out there"
- the subsequent montage about the proliferation of
guns and the excitement of gun-owners, plus the depiction of a few
real-life killings - accompanied by the Beatles' song: "Happiness
is a Warm Gun"
- the interview with rocker Marilyn Manson, calling
himself "The Poster Boy for Fear" - and making the connection
between fear and consumer consumption: ("...You're watching
television, you're watching the news, you're being pumped full of
fear. There's floods, there's AIDS, there's murder, cut to commercial,
buy the Acura, buy the Colgate. If you have bad breath, they're not
gonna talk to ya. If you got pimples, the girl's not gonna f--k you,
and it's just this, it's a campaign of fear and consumption, and
that's what I think that it's all based on - it's the whole idea
that 'keep everyone afraid and they'll consume'")
Michael Moore's Interview Subjects
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James Nichols
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Marilyn Manson
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Charlton Heston
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- also Manson's response to Michael Moore's question: "If
you were to talk directly to the kids at Columbine, or the people
in that community, what would you say to them if they were here
right now?" -- ("I wouldn't say a single word to them.
I would listen to what they have to say, and that's what no one
did")
- the concluding segment with actor/NRA chairman Charlton
Heston at his "estate atop Beverly Hills," who expressed
his pro-gun position (and refused any apologies) only a few weeks
after the Columbine (Littleton, Colorado) HS shooting in April, 1999,
and after the late February, 2000 shooting death of a 6 year-old
girl at Buell Elementary School in Flint, MI (with Moore showing
a picture of a victim) - but then refused further questions and walked
away
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"A Brief History of USA"
Free Gun for Opening Up a CD at a Bank
Dog Shoots Man
Moore With Michigan Militia
Moore with Picture of Gun Victim Shown to Charlton Heston
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