Roger & Me
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Michael Moore
Michael Moore
Robert Schuller
Bob Eubanks
Michael Moore
Rhonda Britto
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Documentary about the elimination of 30,000 jobs in Flint, Michigan by General Motors.
Director
Michael Moore
Cast
Michael Moore
Robert Schuller
Bob Eubanks
Michael Moore
Rhonda Britto
Anita Bryant
Deputy Fred Ross
Ronald Reagan
Kaye Lani Rae Rafko
Pat Boone
Steve Wilson
Roger Smith
Pat Boone
Robert Schuller
Deputy Fred Ross
Ronald Reagan
Bob Eubanks
Roger Smith
Anita Bryant
Crew
Bob Andersen
Diana Anderson
Buddy Arnold
Charlie Arnot
Terry Asher
Edward Asner
Hoyt Axton
Burt Bacharach
Lynda Bahaudin
Pat Barrie
Chuck Barris
Christopher Beaver
Brian Beck
Clarita Beck
Milton Berle
Rod Birleson
Rod Birleson
Jeff Bloomer
Anne Bohlen
Pat Boone
Gary Boren
Anita Bryant
William Bryce
Vinnie Bui
Betty Cooke
J. Fred Coots
Larry Coppola
Paula Coppola
Lloyd Dangle
Hal David
John Denver
B. G. Desylva
Robert Edgerton
Ruth Edgerton
Kevin Fallis
Adam Fleishman
Amy Flynn
Dana Foote
Ronna Foote
Ronna Foote
Connie Francis
Haven Gillespie
Kathleen Glynn
Kathleen Glynn
Kathleen Glynn
Norman Gottlieb
Vivian Gottlieb
Woody Guthrie
Thomas Hall
Pansy Hawkins
William Hayden
Eugene Herzog
Sally Herzog
David Hill
Mildred Hill
Patty Hill
Bruce Hornsby
Bruce Hornsby
Andrea Hull
Judy Irving
Judy Irving
Al Jolson
Francine Jones
Larry Jones
Rebecca Kanner
Buddy Kaye
Frank Kolinski
Richard Kronenberg
F I Lankey
Stephanie Laubrick
Ethel Lee
Jerry Leiber
Paula Longendyke
Gene Maclellan
Albert Malotte
Artie Malvin
The Michigan State University Marching Band
Ann Mathews
Dwight Matlock
Regina Mcnulty
Pat Megison
Joseph Meyer
Frank Moore
Michael Moore
Michael Moore
Veronica Moore
Andrew Morehouse
Miguel Munoz
Daniel S Noga
David Petersen
David Petersen
Becky Pettengill
Dave Pettengill
Our Tuesday Night Bingo Players
Richard Prelinger
Barbara Prusak
John Prusak
Keith Prusak
Robert Prusak
Kevin Rafferty
Kurt Rauf
Kate Reed
Christopher Reilly
Gini Reticker
David O. Rogers
Nathan Schafer
Bruce Schermer
Bruce Schermer
Jerry Seelan
Bertha Serich
Val Sklar
Bruce Springsteen
Bruce Springsteen
Melissa Stanzler
Wendey Stanzler
Wendey Stanzler
Josef Steiff
Susan Steigerwalt
Mike Stoller
Sue Stone
Jim Torres
Marilyn Trent
Readers Of The Michigan Voice
Peter Waggoner
Bernie Wayne
Carl Weiss
Jennifer Beman White
Jennifer Beman White
Mark White
Robert Wilhelm
Robert Wilhelm
Brian Wilson
David Zaremba
John Zweifler
Ruth Zweifler
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Roger & Me -
Moore, the former editor of Mother Jones magazine (and whose father worked on an auto assembly line), left his day job and independently financed the film himself, beginning in 1986. It took two years to shoot Roger & Me, and while Moore ultimately managed to track Smith down, the chairman would not speak with or accompany Moore to Flint to see the pain and suffering he had caused. Roger & Me by turns induces laughter and anger, but was it completely factual? When the film was released in 1989, Moore was accused of manipulating chronological events for dramatic purposes by Harlan Jacobson, then co-editor of Film Comment .
In his article, Jacobson charged that Moore "created the impression of a direct sequence of events that didn't happen in Flint in the one-to-one casual fashion his documentary implies." For example, while Ronald Reagan did appear in Flint, eating pizza with laid off workers and suggesting that they move to Texas, it did not happen while he was president, but while he was still a candidate. The creation of the doomed Auto World amusement park (built to recreate the glory of old Flint and the auto industry, right down to a fake Main Street, while the real Main Street was being shuttered), which cost and lost millions, happened before GM closed the plants, not after. Moore was further accused of overstating the amount of actual jobs lost by 20,000. Pauline Kael, in her review for The New Yorker eviscerated the film, calling it "an aw-shucks, cracker-barrel pastiche" that was created by "a slick ad exec [who] comes on in a give-'em hell style, but he breaks faith with the audience."
Moore's response to his critics was that "no documentary is in linear chronological order. If you're looking for that, watch C-SPAN. [...] I wanted to paint a portrait of this town in the '80s. I never said that the film began in 1986. I consciously avoided using dates. Everything depicted did stem from the closing of the plants. [...] People never heard of a docucomedy but I tried to make a film people want to see." And see it they did. Despite the controversy, Moore sold the rights to Warner Bros. for a reported $3 million, and was the darling of the film festival circuit. He has gone on to win numerous awards for his hard-hitting looks at subjects like gun violence, capitalism, and the events surrounding the attacks on 9/11. Most recently, he has starred in a one-man show Michael Moore in TrumpLand (2016) about the current election cycle and the division it has caused in the United States.
SOURCES:
Dutka, Elaine "Will Controversy Cost 'Roger' an Oscar?" The Los Angeles Times 17 Jan 90
Ebert, Roger "Attacks On 'Roger & Me' Completely Miss Point Of Film" Chicago Sun-Times 11 Feb 90
The Internet Movie Database
Marche, Stephen "Michael Moore's Roger & Me at 25: Still the Best Movie About the U.S. Economic Collapse: Why you should re-watch the 1989 documentary about corporate greed" Esquire 19 Dec 14
By Lorraine LoBianco
Roger & Me -
Roger & Me
Moore, the former editor of Mother Jones magazine (and whose father worked on an auto assembly line), left his day job and independently financed the film himself, beginning in 1986. It took two years to shoot Roger and Me , and while Moore ultimately managed to track Smith down, the chairman would not speak with or accompany Moore to Flint to see the pain and suffering he had caused. Roger and Me by turns, induces laughter and anger, but was it completely factual? When the film was released in 1989, Moore was accused of manipulating chronological events for dramatic purposes by Harlan Jacobson, then co-editor of Film Comment . In his article, Jacobson charged that Moore "created the impression of a direct sequence of events that didn't happen in Flint in the one-to-one casual fashion his documentary implies." For example, while Ronald Reagan did appear in Flint, eating pizza with laid off workers and suggesting that they move to Texas, it did not happen while he was president, but while he was still a candidate. The creation of the doomed Auto World amusement park (built to recreate the glory of old Flint and the auto industry, right down to a fake Main Street, while the real Main Street was being shuttered), which cost and lost millions, happened before GM closed the plants, not after. Moore was further accused of overstating the amount of actual jobs lost by 20,000. Pauline Kael, in her review for The New Yorker eviscerated the film, calling it "an aw-shucks, cracker-barrel pastiche" that was created by "a slick ad exec [who] comes on in a give-'em hell style, but he breaks faith with the audience."
Moore's response to his critics was that "no documentary is in linear chronological order. If you're looking for that, watch C-SPAN. [...] I wanted to paint a portrait of this town in the '80s. I never said that the film began in 1986. I consciously avoided using dates. Everything depicted did stem from the closing of the plants. [...] People never heard of a docucomedy but I tried to make a film people want to see." And see it they did. Despite the controversy, Moore sold the rights to Warner Bros. for a reported $3 million, and was the darling of the film festival circuit. He has gone on to win numerous awards for his hard-hitting looks at subjects like gun violence, capitalism, and the events surrounding the attacks on 9/11. Most recently, he has starred in a one-man show Michael Moore in TrumpLand (2016) about the current election cycle and the division it has caused in the United States.
By Lorraine LoBianco
SOURCES:
Dutka, Elaine "Will Controversy Cost 'Roger' an Oscar?" The Los Angeles Times 17 Jan 90
Ebert, Roger "Attacks On 'Roger & Me' Completely Miss Point Of Film" Chicago Sun-Times 11 Feb 90
The Internet Movie Database
Marche, Stephen "Michael Moore's Roger & Me at 25: Still the Best Movie About the U.S. Economic Collapse: Why you should re-watch the 1989 documentary about corporate greed" Esquire 19 Dec 14
Roger & Me
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States December 20, 1989
Released in United States on Video June 20, 1990
Released in United States September 1989
Released in United States October 1989
Released in United States October 28, 1989
Released in United States November 1989
Released in United States 1990
Released in United States January 1990
Released in United States February 1990
Shown at New York Film Festival September 27 & 28, 1989.
Shown at Toronto Festival of Festivals September 9& 11, 1989.
Shown at Vancouver International Film Festival October 7, 9 & 15, 1989.
Shown at Independent Feature Film Market (IFFM) in New York City October 4-13, 1989.
Shown at Greater Fort Lauderdale Film Festival October 28, 1989.
Shown at London Film Festival November 10-26, 1989.
Shown at United States Film Festival Park City, Utah January 20-28, 1990.
Shown at Berlin Film Festival February 9-20, 1990.
Warner Bros paid an estimated $3,000,000 for the acquisition of "Roger & Me" which also included providing $25,000 for homeless families affected by the closing of General Motors.
Feature directorial debut for former "Mother Jones" editor Michael Moore.
Released in United States Winter December 19, 1989
Released in United States December 20, 1989 (New York City and Los Angeles)
Released in United States on Video June 20, 1990
Released in United States September 1989 (Shown at New York Film Festival September 27 & 28, 1989.)
Released in United States September 1989 (Shown at Toronto Festival of Festivals September 9& 11, 1989.)
Released in United States October 1989 (Shown at Vancouver International Film Festival October 7, 9 & 15, 1989.)
Released in United States October 1989 (Shown at Independent Feature Film Market (IFFM) in New York City October 4-13, 1989.)
Released in United States October 28, 1989 (Shown at Greater Fort Lauderdale Film Festival October 28, 1989.)
Released in United States 1990 (Shown at AFI/Los Angeles International Film Festival (U.S. Indie Showcase - Documentaries) April 19 - May 3, 1990.)
Released in United States January 1990 (Shown at United States Film Festival Park City, Utah January 20-28, 1990.)
Released in United States February 1990 (Shown at Berlin Film Festival February 9-20, 1990.)
Released in United States Winter December 19, 1989
Released in United States November 1989 (Shown at London Film Festival November 10-26, 1989.)