This essay examines the effectiveness of Michael Moore’s Roger & Me (1989) as a documentary. It outlines key elements that define documentary filmmaking, analyses Moore’s opinionated style, and considers whether this approach strengthened or weakened the film’s critique of American capitalism. The discussion draws on established film-historical perspectives to evaluate the balance between advocacy and fairness.
Key Points in a Documentary Film
Documentaries typically combine factual footage, interviews and archival material to present a version of reality. Core characteristics include the selection of subject matter, the director’s editorial choices and the degree of personal intervention. Effective documentaries often foreground social or political issues while attempting to retain credibility through evidence, yet they may also embrace subjectivity to engage audiences. In film-history scholarship, these tensions between observation and argument are viewed as central to the genre’s development during the late twentieth century.
Moore’s Opinionated Approach and Its Impact
In Roger & Me, Moore presents the closure of General Motors plants in Flint, Michigan, as a direct consequence of corporate decisions made by chairman Roger Smith. The film uses humour, staged encounters and a clear narrative voiceover to highlight the human cost of deindustrialisation. This partisan method arguably helped the film reach wide audiences by making complex economic processes accessible and emotionally resonant. However, critics have noted that such techniques risk oversimplifying events and omitting counter-perspectives from company representatives. Reflections on Roger & Me, Michael Moore, and His Critics (Cohan, Carley and Crowdus, 1990) explore these debates, observing that the film’s rhetorical force derives precisely from its refusal to adopt a neutral stance.
Justification for the Critique
Moore’s explicit condemnation of modern American capitalism can be seen as justified given the scale of job losses and community decline documented in Flint. The film’s strength lies in its ability to connect individual stories with broader structural forces. Nevertheless, a more apolitical treatment that presented management viewpoints alongside worker testimonies might have produced a different, perhaps less polemical, account. Whether this would have improved the work remains debatable; an even-handed approach could have diluted the urgency Moore sought to convey. Generally, the film demonstrates that documentaries need not remain impartial to function as powerful social commentary, although the resulting partiality limits claims to comprehensive objectivity.
Conclusion
Roger & Me proves effective in spotlighting industrial decline through an openly subjective lens, yet its partisan methods simultaneously invite questions about balance and fairness. The film illustrates how documentary form can accommodate both advocacy and factual reporting, influencing later examples of the genre while highlighting the ongoing tension between engagement and even-handedness.
References
- Cohan, S., Carley, W. and Crowdus, G. (1990) Reflections on Roger & Me, Michael Moore, and His Critics. Cinéaste, 17(4), pp. 25-30.

