Slacker Uprising: Movie Review (2008)
This week, viewers have two options to view George W. Bush and his administration from two biased perspectives. For the most part, one movie is what audiences will expect. The other? Not so much.

Its companion movie, of sorts, is Michael Moore’s “Slacker Uprising,” which was released last year to film festivals under the title “Captain Mike Across America,” and which only three weeks ago was available for a free download on the Internet. It now is available on DVD.
The film is set on the cusp of the 2004 presidential election, when John Kerry lost his lead in the polls due to Bush’s effective swift-boat smear campaign and Kerry’s own unwillingness to act against it until it was too late.

The filmmaker, of course, is Moore, who took to the road in a divisive effort to visit 62 cities in 45 days. His intention wasn’t just to push his own agenda--get Bush out of office--but to stimulate the youth vote, which Moore saw as critical to promote the change he was seeking.

As the film explores, some in the Republican party worked to quash Moore’s right to free speech. Wealthy businessmen in Utah and California, for instance, offered tens of thousands of dollars to key universities if they agreed to deny Moore his right to assemble. Moore called those efforts a bribe (and he’s right--they were), and while Utah stood firm against those efforts, the University of San Diego did not. How that backfired on them is one of the film’s highlights.


Still, when Moore speaks from the gut about the injustices he sees in the Iraq War, when he slams journalists for not asking the right questions of the Bush administration before we launched into that war, and when he rallies a crowd of young people in an effort to get them out and vote, he is terrific--a furious, famous citizen raising his voice and grateful he has the right to do so.
Grade: B-
October 20, 2008 at 6:31 PM
October 20, 2008 at 7:00 PM
sounds like a movie that i would watch.
November 19, 2008 at 2:53 PM
I have been watching a lot of political documentaries lately.
I haven't seen this one yet.
The other night PBS aired "Boogie Man, the Lee Atwater story".
I'd love to read your take on that one, Christopher.