Release Date: January 16, 2004 Director: Mark Achbar Producer: Bart Simpson, Mark Achbar Studio: Mongrel Media Starring: Chris Barrett, Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein, Luke McCabe, Mickela J. Mikael, Michael Moore Genre: Documentary Running Time: 145 minutes
Thursday, October 6, 2005 9:16:45 PM | (Age Not Specified)
is an eye opening for some and for others a reminder that the "men" are not the goverments of rich countries, no those are just puppets, the men, the policy forcer is the CORPORATION-no country, no boundaries...
Saturday, February 12, 2005 12:10:45 AM | (Age Not Specified)
Benito Mussolini consistently stated that fascism was synonomous with corporatism, and this film should be the wake up call for the world to reject both Wall Street and Madison Avenue.
Wednesday, August 25, 2004 1:08:10 AM | (Age Not Specified)
This is the movie to see when listening to Michael Moore becomes unbearable. Prodding and respectful: inspired me to read Naomi Klein`s "No Logo" and Noam Chomsky`s "Manufacturing Consent".
Friday, July 9, 2004 4:16:47 PM | (age group: 18-24) | F
There were some very valid points. It was way too long. They were trying to argue too many points, they should have focussed on a few major ones. I left after 2 hours - I got the point.
Monday, June 14, 2004 2:31:38 AM | (age group: 25-34) | F
I was told that it was "the next Michael Moore" of films (which is funny to me since he was in it, but I digress). One of the things that I loved about it was that it wasn`t ACTUALLY his style of film-making. I like Michael Moore, a lot, but sometimes his films can leave others with a bad taste in their mouth; they feel he`s being dramatic, making a mockery of documentary, etc. etc. and in there the message gets lost. There was no way, NO WAY, that the message of this film could be lost. Thank you, thank you, thank you.