The Big One Movie Review
The Big One Review
"The Big One" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1997
Cast and Crew
Director : Michael MooreProducer : Kathleen Glynn
Screenwiter : Michael Moore
Starring : Michael Moore,Elaine Bly,Dan Burns,Chip Carter,Robert Dornan,Steve Forbes,Mary Gielow,Richard Jewell,Garrison Keillor,Andy Crash Kelly,Phil Knight,Studs Terkel
For a movie with a title like The Big One, Michael Moore's follow-up to Roger &
Me is awfully small. It's a mishmash of corporate butt-kickery, political
naysaying, and self-indulgence, courtesy of Moore's random walk across America
during a late-'90s book tour.
Moore flies from city to city to expose the Hard Times he's become well known
for. A Payday factory is shut down. Borders workers in Des Moines are getting
wages deducted for a health plan that has no doctor in the city. Moore
complains about vegetables on his McDonald's fish sandwich and how life went in
the toilet in Flint, Michigan. He goes on a tirade (admittedly, a hysterical
tirade) about how Steve Forbes (then running for president) was an alien. He
gives a lot of speeches. He shepherds the unemployed (who mysteriously seem to
lose their jobs the one day he's in town). And eventually he sets his sights on
Phil Knight and Nike, whose outsourced manufacturing has long been rumored to
be the product of child labor.
If this all sounds a bit random it is -- only not a bit, it's completely random
and without any focus at all. What's "the big one," anyway? Who knows. It's
certainly not Phil Knight, who runs around Moore intellectually even though
he's clearly in the moral wrong. Moore's big victory: He gets Knight to shake
his hand as a pledge to consider opening a factory in Flint. Right. (Per media
reports, little to nothing has changed about Nike's manufacturing since this
film was made... eight years ago.) (OK, to be honest "The Big One" is Moore's
suggested new name for the United States.)
The Big One is funniest when Moore is being alternately ass-kissed and outright
lied to by Random House and bookstores where he's speaking. A running gag
invloves the Random House publicist "escorts," bubbleheaded women who cringe at
Moore's every move. His attempts to undermine their "authority" are priceless,
though of course they're largely irrelevant in the grand scheme of the film.
As usual, Moore's running monologue is full of inconsistencies: Moore eats fast
food at every meal (not exactly an industry known for treating its employees
well). He flies first class while listening to the flight attendents complain
that they haven't had a raise in 20 years. He rides the free cart in the
airport while complaining about people who ride the free cart in the airport.
The good news is he knows he's ridiculous, and he kind of makes fun of it.
Does that absolve Moore of making a movie without much of a point? Not really,
but The Big One is ultimately a good intro to Moore's rhetoric -- as if that's
something any of us really need.
You can now get the film in a box set with Bowling for Columbine and a bonus
DVD featuring outtakes from various speeches Moore has given on his latest book
tour.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





