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Bowling For Columbine : Special Edition (Two Disc Set) [DVD] [2002]
 
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Bowling For Columbine : Special Edition (Two Disc Set) [DVD] [2002]

Michael Moore , Charlton Heston , Michael Moore    Suitable for 15 years and over   DVD
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (103 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Actors: Michael Moore, Charlton Heston, Marilyn Manson, Jacobo Arbenz, Mike Bradley
  • Directors: Michael Moore
  • Writers: Michael Moore
  • Producers: Charles Bishop, Charlie Siskel, Chris Aldred, Gillian Aldrich, Jeff Gibbs
  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.77:1
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: 15
  • Studio: Momentum Pictures
  • DVD Release Date: 20 Oct 2003
  • Run Time: 120 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (103 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0000DINNY
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 23,444 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

An Oscar-winning documentary based on a 1999 massacre at an American High School in Colorado, Bowling for Columbine is film-maker Michael Moore's take on the culture of firearms violence that is, apparently, peculiar to the USA. Significantly, this is no detective investigation into the psychology and motives of the two students who randomly opened fire on their classmates, killing 12 of them; Moore regards such particulars as practically irrelevant. Rather, it's an attempt to counter the moral panic and right-wing diagnoses that followed the massacre, with people such as rock star Marilyn Manson blamed by some.

Using a mixture of roving interviews, statistics, historical documentary footage, cartoon animation and the set-ups familiar to fans of his TV Nation series, Moore teases out appalling truths about gun proliferation in America. He's able to obtain a rifle by opening a bank account and shows that the bullets used in the Columbine massacre were still available at K-Mart--until he confronts their management with victims of the shootings. But it's not just gun proliferation that's the problem. Canada, Moore discovers, is similarly rife with firearms yet has a far lower murder rate. The problem with the US, Moore believes, is an irrational climate of fear that has driven the country to reactionary extremes since the days of the pioneers, persuading citizens that they need to be armed to the teeth.

In a film short on lowlights, the highlight is Moore's confrontation with NRA President Charlton Heston. Moore's deceptively genial, shambling, regular American dude appearance (as well as his NRA membership) wins Heston's confidence and Moore teases from the actor an inadvertently racist slip of the tongue, before turning up the heat, at which point Heston terminates the interview. In this moment, the sort of anger Moore demonstrated at the 2003 Academy Awards ceremony surfaces briefly as he brandishes a picture of a gunshot victim to the retreating Heston. Funny, shrewd, righteous, hard to deny, Bowling for Columbine is uncomfortable and irresistible film-making. --David Stubbs

On the DVD: This two-disc special edition of Bowling for Columbine contains an updated voice-over introduction from Michael Moore on the first disc, as well as a direct-to-camera talk on the second disc in which he discusses reactions to the film and his reaction to winning an Oscar. (He has to recite his celebrated acceptance speech because the Academy refused permission for him to show a clip.) Other extras are good, thoughtful, funny and provocative interviews with ex-Clinton press secretary Joe Lockhart and with film critic Charlie Rose, plus a moving return to Littleton, Colorado--home of Columbine High School--to find out what local people thought of the documentary. --Mark Walker

Special Features

  • Exclusive Michael Moore interview on Oscar win & his acceptation speech
  • Feature commentary by interns with introduction by Michael Moore
  • Moore's interview with Clinton's press secretary Joe Lockhart
  • Teacher's guide
  • Return to Littleton/ Denver 6 months after Bowling For Columbine
  • Film Festival scrapbook
  • Moore on The Charlie Rose Show
  • Marilyn Manson Fight Song music video


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Posing the question 'are we a nation of gun nuts or just plain nuts?', Bowling for Columbine takes a polemic pot-shot at American gun culture and the media that supports – and perpetuates – it.

Revered by the little people, feared by the corporates and getting right up Charlton Heston's gun barrel, America's favourite whistle blower Michael Moore has armed himself with his own secret weapon – humour - to create this engaging, entertaining and thought-provoking documentary. Starting point is the harrowing 1999 Columbine High School massacre – in which 13 students were murdered. Before the two fellow students responsible carried out their killing spree, they had gone bowling...

The opening scenes sees Moore, sporting his trademark baseball cap, casually open an account in a US bank which offers 'more bang for your buck!' (those who open an account there receive a free rifle in return). Moore's first question on obtaining his new firearm: 'Um... do you think it's a little dangerous handing out guns in a bank?'.

The documentary goes on to explore America's trigger-happy society – a country in which around 11,000 people die annually as a result of gun violence – throwing up some chilling stories along the way: the murder of a six-year-old girl by a six-year-old boy; Columbine High School survivors still embedded with bullets bought over the counter at K-Mart; and the town of Virgin, Utah, that has passed a law requiring all residents to own guns...

Moore also aims his camera at Charlton Heston in the Oscar-winning actor's high-profile role as president of the NRA (National Rifle Association). 'Chuck' and his fellow fervent pro-gun lobbyists have developed a habit of organising their rallies on the spot of school shootings before victims have barely been mourned.

Born, rather ironically, in Flint, Michigan, Moore share's the same birthday – 23 April, 1954 – with political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal, whose release is another cause close to his leftist heart. Author of bestseller Stupid White Men and creator of satirical television series, the Emmy-winning TV Nation and The Awful Truth, Moore made his major breakthrough in 1989 with the documentary Roger & Me. Made from funds raised by organising neighbourhood bingo games in his house, the film follows the anti-corporate crusader in his fruitless attempts to invite the chairman of General Motors, Roger Smith, out for a few beers. And, in his film The Big One (1997), Moore succeeds in securing a face-to-face interview with Nike CEO Phil Knight, famously challenging him on his company's shoes being produced by children in factories in Indonesia. Just a matter of months after the film's release, Nike raised the minimum age of workers in factories to 18. Bowling for Columbine also secures a similar coup during its making.

Unanimous winner of the Special Jury Prize at 2002’s Cannes Film Festival (the first time in 46 years a documentary has been accepted into competition at the festival), it’s world première on 17 May, 2002 was followed by a 13-minute standing ovation. And earlier this year, with Heston in the audience, Moore controversially picked up the Oscar for Best Documentary at the Academy Awards. Essential viewing.

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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
I highly recommend this film. Extremely relevant to what is happening to the United States and the rise of violence, racism, bigotry in the wake of the theft of the 2000 election.

Michael Moore has the guts to stand up to the Republican/Corporate controlled media. Of course he has been villified by such hypocrites as Joe (dead intern found in his office) Scarborough, Ann (liberals should be shot) Coulter, and Lucianne (giving oral pleasure to Nixon) Goldberg, but they cannot refute the facts. Their only defense for Bush and gun nuts is that Michael Moore is "fat" and "ugly" therefore he has no credibility. Honey, if that were true Rush Lardbaugh would have been laughed off the airwaves years ago.

Moore goes to great lengths to expose the fascination with firearms including a bank that hands out free guns for opening a checking account, a look inside Littleton and a rare interview with Charleton (I sold my soul to the NRA) Heston.

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77 of 86 people found the following review helpful
By W. G. Hardy VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
Having seen this at the cinema, twice, I can understand why this documentary won it's award at the Cannes Film Festival in 2002.

The focus is primarily about gun ownership, and some history of gun laws, in the USA. Columbine High School is used as one of the illustrative examples of how and why the current legislation is not a good thing.
Some coverage is provided about the culture surrounding gun ownership, and the culture of fear that seems prevelant in american media over recent years. As a regular viewer of american news services (thank-you digital tv :-), I can attest to the accuracy of this coverage in comparison to that provided in europe. Michael Moore provides his own comparison - to media coverage of events in Canada. Also, some interesting insights from Marilyn Manson (who rose considerably in my estimation), which seem especially relevant as we sit on the cusp of Gulf War 2.
Something which was clear to me from Moore's attempts to speak to someone senior in K-Mart, was that without making a fuss, and turning up without an attending media circus, no-one seemed particularly interested in listening to him and the students he was with. It seemed that only when revenue was potentially affected by bad press, was anyone prepared to take any form of action at all.

The closing interview with Charlton Heston, and indeed some of his actions as president of the NRA, leaves one wondering how people of this ilk can sleep at night. Perhaps it's the loaded weapon under the pillow that does it for them, which I find as disturbing as some of the other images presented liberally throughout the documentary.

I speculate that there are those in the USA who will not take well to this. However, I felt that the documentary was well thought through, and presented a good case for attempting to remove guns from the population at large. It may also help a few people consider how a large number of people in europe view the USA.
There's a lot more I could say about this, but you really are better seeing this for yourself. There's plenty in there to make you laugh, but there's even more that you'll watch from behind your hands in disbelief. You can be laughing one minute, and very misty eyed the next. You absolutely, positively must see this.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Who needs a gun?
Just who needs a gun no one that I know, that's for sure. The rifle club reminds me of the ramblers association. Read more
Published 6 months ago by wjw
a watch in Fazakerley liverpool
its the second DVD we have watched produced by Michael. He is a fascinating character totally unfased.
The world would be a poor place without the likes of him. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Mr. D. Hinds
Patchy
Like all Moore's documentaries, they are patchy. Good and bad. The intentions are good, but though he is often the first to criticise poor research, he is also guilty. Read more
Published 9 months ago by B. L. J. Webb
don't believe the hype
First of all, I enjoyed watching Bowling for Columbine a lot. Michael Moore gets the right people in front of the camera and gets the quotes essential to make his own story in a... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Tom Van San
Bowling for bulls**t
This film is nothing more than liberal propaganda on a mass scale. It was as biased as I have ever known and as inaccurate as can be. Read more
Published 11 months ago by W. Newlan
Michael Moore against the forces of lunacy - again!
Michael Moore continues to address the corrupt, stupid and downright mystifying issues plaguing American society - this time it's the completely crazy gun laws and the violent... Read more
Published 22 months ago by K. J. Harland
stuarts exam
recieved on the morning of his exam which left him time to view and then carry out his exam on this film.
Published 23 months ago by Mr. J. ORR
Great movie
Superb production showing the 'worlds powered country' - the U.S.A., where a man is of secondary importance. What is the impact of universal access to firearms? Read more
Published on 30 April 2010 by Mrs. M. L. Zelazna
Good man, Moore.
Michael Moore is a brave man ? he worries about what a lot of us worry about, but actually has the courage to write or make films about it all. Read more
Published on 8 April 2010 by Mrs. D. Guest
Brilliant film
I don't know where to start my praises of this amazing and thought provoking film. I bought it for use in connection with English lessons age 15-16. Read more
Published on 20 Feb 2010 by Pippin
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