Where to Invade Next (2016)

*

*

Review of Michael Moore’s latest film.


Political Film Blog


687474703a2f2f7777772e6f7065646e6577732e636f6d2f706f70756c756d2f75706c6f61646e69632f73637265656e2d73686f742d323031362d30322d31342d61742d31322d32312d33382d706d2d706e675f395f32303136303231342d3231362e706e67.png





by David Swanson



Your new movie, Where to Invade Next, is very powerful, your best so far for certain.



Get well.



Fast.



We need you.



You’ve packed a great many issues into this film, with visuals, with personalities, with entertainment. If people will watch this, they’ll learn what many of us have struggled to tell them and more, as there was plenty that I learned as well.



I must assume that when U.S. audiences watch scenes that dramatically clash with their world yet seem humane and reasonable they’ll be brought to the point ofthinking.



You show us political candidates, not screeching for more prisons, but holding a televised election debate in a prison in an effort to win the votes of the prisoners, who are permitted to vote. What are we to make of that? You also show us scenes from U.S. prisons of grotesque brutality. Then you show…


View original post 776 more words


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 16, 2016 12:00
No comments have been added yet.


The Most Revolutionary Act

Stuart Jeanne Bramhall
Uncensored updates on world affairs, economics, the environment and medicine.
Follow Stuart Jeanne Bramhall's blog with rss.