Roger & Me
This is a documentary about the closure of a factory of General Motors in Flint, Michigan. This decision led to 30,000 workers lost their jobs. The film revolves around the talents of director Michael Moore in an interview with GM CEO - Roger Smith.
16 September 1926, Alton, Iowa, USA
25 March 1940, Barnsdall, Oklahoma, USA
12 July 1925, Columbus, Ohio, USA
8 August 1942, Detroit, Michigan, USA
May1971, Cape Town, South Africa
6 February 1911, Tampico, Illinois, USA
January 14, 1924 in New York City, New York, USA
23 April 1954, Flint, Michigan, USA
9 May 1954, Flint, Michigan, USA
1 June 1934, Jacksonville, Florida, USA
1957, Flint, Michigan, USA
31 October 1931, Wharton, Texas, USA
26 August 1963, Monroe, Michigan, USA
8 February 1940, Lancashire, England, UK
8 January 1938, Flint, Michigan, USA
September 18, 2003
So many classic bits.
October 13, 2014
The film itself remains a hard kick in the head-a funny, angry inquiry into what the hell happened to the American dream.
December 03, 2004
Entertaining but overpraised first effort from Moore
August 08, 2003
Regardless of Moore's conceitedness and simple-mindedness, he still makes a good movie, and without inventing so many facts as he did with Bowling for Columbine.
October 15, 2004
the first of Moore's already legendary documentaries.
February 20, 2017
Rails against corporate greed and asks what happened to the American Dream and its promise of middle-class prosperity.
October 06, 2014
Michael Moore's film is intelligent, funny, in-depth, and touching, all executed with a gripping hands-on approach to the material that helps engage the audience more than you're standard talking heads documentary.
October 28, 2003
brilliant and subversive
April 13, 2003
Nem todos os argumentos de Michael Moore são válidos como ele gostaria, mas o filme cumpre seu objetivo ao analisar a decadência de uma cidade em função da ganância de uma grande empresa.
June 22, 2005
Effective.
July 30, 2003
While not as good as Bowling for Columbine, Roger and Me does show delirious hints of what was yet to come.
October 20, 2006
Despite some tempering with the chronological sequence of events, this is a scathingly biting satire of Reagonomics that captures the zeitgeist of the late 1980s much more poignantly than most Hollywood movies.

