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Copyright 2002 The Baltimore Sun Company
All Rights Reserved
The Baltimore Sun
June 2, 2002
French hail their new hero;
Step aside, Jerry Lewis - Cannes goes wild for Michael Moore and his
film, 'Bowling for Columbine'
Chris Kaltenbach
CANNES, France - Michael Moore doesn't look the part of hero, but at
Cannes, he sure was treated like one.
All during the recently concluded film festival, Moore was lauded.
The first screening of his film, Bowling for Columbine, a scathing and
fitfully satiric look at the United States' infatuation with guns and
violence, was followed by a 13-minute standing ovation, the longest
anyone at Cannes could remember. His movie, already the first documentary
to be entered in the festival in 46 years, was the only one that everybody
was talking about. Clearly, the French couldn't get enough of this unshaven,
overweight, self-described schlub from Flint, Mich. Last Sunday, seven
hours before the 55th Festival de Cannes was to close with the awarding
of the coveted Palm D'Or, Moore already had started raking in the hardware.
That afternoon, a group of French educators, the Jury Education Nationale,
overwhelmingly had voted him their grand prize, and feted him with yet
another prolonged standing ovation.
After shyly waving off the acclaim, Moore amused the educators with
a recitation of his first high-school French lesson - something featuring
mama and papa and their little girl. But then, turning serious, he thanked
French educators for their consistent support (his first film, Roger
& Me, an attack on corporate America, is a part of the French curriculum).
He praised the French people for soundly defeating right-wing presidential
candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen in last month's presidential poll. And he
lauded audiences in Cannes for appreciating his film as the cautionary
tale he intended.
A serious film
"I want this movie to act as a warning to this country and to
other countries," Moore said. "If you as a society allow this
sort of violence, if you allow your government to beat up on those who
have little or nothing, you will end up like us."
Moore stepped offstage, ambled slowly to a small table in an adjoining
meeting room - 12 straight days of anything, even adulation, can tire
a man - then sat down to accept even more plaudits, pats on the back
and autograph requests. And that was only the start of Moore's big day.
By the time Cannes closed Sunday, Moore would also have in his possession
a special award from the film festival jury, a U.S. distribution deal
with United Artists, and the knowledge that - for the moment, at least
- he has supplanted such cinematic stalwarts as Jerry Lewis, Woody Allen
and Martin Scorsese as France's favorite American.
"Oh man, that is such a typical American question," Moore
says in maybe-mock disgust when asked how it feels to be the new Jerry
Lewis. And if he is genuinely bothered by the question, perhaps his
frustration is understandable. While it has its satiric moments, there's
nothing funny about the underlying message of Bowling for Columbine,
or about the reasons the French are flocking to it so.
"The Europeans are not taking this film as if they're laughing
at us or whatever," Moore explains during a rare break, after being
interviewed for a French television show and before sitting down to
a quick seaside lunch with his wife, producer Kathleen Glynn. "They're
taking it as a warning. If they continue down this road they're on,
they'll have the same thing. I mean, we're not worse than they are,
they're not better than us, simply because they don't kill each other.
They just haven't gone down the path we've gone down."
In Bowling for Columbine, Moore does more than simply document America's
bloodlust; he tries to get at its root. Sure, there's security-camera
footage of the 1999 shootings at Columbine High (teen murderers Eric
Harris and Dylan Klebold started their big day with a trip to the bowling
alley), a frustratingly fruitless interview with NRA President Charlton
Heston; and a tearful visit with the principal of a Flint-area elementary
school, where a 6-year-old girl was shot and killed by a 6-year-old
classmate.
But at the heart of the movie are Moore's attempts to explain America's
predilection for violence and to understand why other countries have
nearly as many guns, show just as many violent movies and have just
as violent a history, but don't kill one another in as nearly great
numbers.
"If it was human nature, they'd be doing it here in France,"
Moore says. "Or in Canada. How about the Swiss? In Switzerland,
it's the law, you have to have a gun in every house, because they have
no standing army. Virtually every home has a gun, and yet they only
had 70 or 80 murders last year."
Braced for criticism
Moore sees fault all around, but most of all, he sees in the United
States a society where people are afraid, where leaders would rather
fuel that fear than calm it. He sees the political reaction to Sept.
11 as a defining example of what's wrong with the political climate
in his home country.
"If anything, the way to honor those deaths is to have more freedom
now, is to have more openness, more liberty," he says. "What
better way to show the rest of the world that this is what we truly
believe in than by having more democracy, not less.
"But of course," he says, referring to President Bush, "I'm
asking this of someone who subverted the democracy and stole the election."
Moore realizes the accolades will not continue unabated. Already, he's
been portrayed as un-American by those upset at his book, Stupid White
Men ... and Other Sorry Excuses for the State of the Nation, which had
the temerity to criticize the president and his administration in the
days following Sept. 11. (The book has spent better than three months
on the New York Times best-seller list, however, suggesting he's not
exactly a lone voice). He's prepared for the critics.
"The most patriotic thing one can do is to try and make (the United
States) a better place for everyone who lives in it," he says,
sitting back in his chair and enjoying his last day on the French Riviera
before going home to a country where the response to Columbine will
undoubtedly be more contentious. "America is about asking questions,
and the freedom to think, and to dissent. There's nothing more American
than that."
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