Roger & Me

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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After decades of product ascendancy, American automakers began facing stiff commercial and design challenges in the late 1970s and 1980s from foreign automakers, especially the Japanese. Michael Moore's controversial documentary Roger & Me chronicles the human toll and hemorrhaging of jobs caused by these upheavals, in this case the firing of 30,000 autoworkers by General Motors in Moore's hometown of Flint, Michigan.

As a narrative structure, Moore uses a comic device sometimes found in political campaign commercials, weaving a message around trying to find the person responsible for a wrong, in this case General Motors Chairman Roger Smith. Roger & Me is take-no-prisoners, advocacy documentary filmmaking, and Moore makes no apologies for his brazen, in-your-face style — he would argue the situation demands it. The themes of unfairness, inequality and the unrealized attainment of the American Dream resonate to this day, while the consequences of ferocious auto-sector competition continue, playing a key long-term role in the city of Detroit's 2013 filing for bankruptcy protection.

Roger & Me was added to the National Film Registry in 2013.

Tropes used in Roger & Me include:
  • Blatant Lies: The whole premise of Roger & Me was his attempts to secure an interview with Roger Smith, making much ado about not being able to do so. In fact, Moore secured at least two interviews with him.