Michael Moore's pals make documentariesae
Michael Moore's pals make documentaries
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By The Associated Press
Published: August 29, 2008
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — They make movies that deal with unpleasant topics such as war and racism, yet are entertaining and even humorous. They're passionate, mischievously creative, politically liberal.
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‘Mike's Peeps'
Organizers dubbed the group "Mike's Peeps.” Moore insisted their entries were chosen for screenings on their own merits, not favoritism.
"They made four of the best films this year,” he said. "We don't bring movies to this festival that are mediocre, or aren't very good, or it was a nice try or whatever.”
The other "peep” films included "Pray the Devil Back to Hell,” directed by Gini Reticker; "Bigger Stronger, Faster,” co-produced by Kurt Engfehr; and first-time director Jason Pollock's "The Youngest Candidate.”
"I think most documentary filmmakers nowadays are Michael Moore disciples,” said Pollock, 26, like Moore a college dropout who found his calling in the cinema.
The new generation is making its mark nearly two decades after Moore's 1989 debut, "Roger & Me,” a dark comedy about the devastation wrought by General Motors Corp.'s downsizing in Flint, Mich. Reticker helped edit the film after Moore brought an early version to New York.
"I thought, ‘Oh my god, this is great — so fresh, so original,"' Reticker said.
Deal and Lessin saw "Roger & Me” in a theater and became Moore fans. A few years later, Lessin saw the first episode of Moore's short-lived television newsmagazine "TV Nation.”
"There was no ‘Daily Show' back then, no Jon Stewart,” she said. "Michael did things on camera no one was doing, said things no one was saying. I was determined to get a job on that show, and by golly I did.”
She became a producer on "TV Nation” and its madcap successor, "The Awful Truth,” once landing in jail and earning a lifetime ban from Disneyland after filming a segment there featuring the character "Crackers, the Corporate Crime-Fighting Chicken.”
Lessin and Deal, both 43, later worked on the Oscar-winning documentary "Bowling for Columbine.”
‘Trouble the Water'
When Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, they headed for New Orleans and met Kimberly and Scott Roberts, survivors of flooding in the Ninth Ward.
Kimberly Roberts had purchased a video camera days earlier. She recorded gripping scenes of their peril and narrow escape, which Lessin and Deal incorporated into "Trouble the Water.”
"Our work with Michael was always about exposing government and corporate accountability,” Lessin said. "This film shows how the government failed miserably. But it's also a story of how people can beat the odds and survive.”
It opens in theaters this month after being named best documentary at this year's Sundance Film Festival.
Reticker also sees Moore as a kindred spirit, while acknowledging satire isn't her specialty.
"Pray the Devil Back to Hell,” which took top documentary honors at the Tribeca Film Festival, is a straightforward and uplifting chronicle of the Christian and Muslim women's movement that ended civil war in Liberia and helped elect the African nation's first female president.
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