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10/10
Great Storytelling and Gives Voice to a Forgotten Group
15 March 2007
Most Americans and even many historians forget the reason why Dr. King came to Memphis; this documentary tells the story of the sanitation workers' strike in 1968.

Ignored by the labor unions, the white power structure, and even their fellow citizens, these workers walked off the job in early 1968 over poor working conditions and poor wages.

The support of the women, children, and others in the African American community of Memphis is demonstrated in this film; without this support, the workers' cause would not have gone on for as long as it did.

The filmmakers, like most good storytellers, chose an antagonist (Mayor Henry Loeb) and used the workers, not Dr. King, as their protagonists.

The film is narrated (ably by Paul Winfield) in the present tense, although it was made in 1993; the 'modern' interviews, filmed that same year, give great perspective and commentary to the narration's reportage. The filmmakers used footage that had been collected at that time to show the events of 1968, and the interviews 25 years later mesh seamlessly.

The true 'star' of this documentary is the sanitation workers who did the job no one else wanted to do but had the courage to stand up and say to the world, "I AM a man!"
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The Venture Bros.: Ghosts of the Sargasso (2004)
Season 1, Episode 6
10/10
A Classic
22 May 2006
What would happen if the perfect cartoon were produced? It has been--by the Venture Bros. team.

Ghosts of the Sargasso pushes all the right culturally relevant buttons: Pop music, cartoon, science, mystery and just plain goofy references abound.

Where else could you find Bowie lyrics, hints of Scooby Doo, and Rainbow Brite tattoos in the same place? For the true sadist/fetishist, the obligatory urine and anal probing are included.

Like most great entertainment, this multi-layered onion reveals more with each viewing.
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Catch-22 (1970)
9/10
A Modern Fable
12 December 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Catch 22 is a fable for our times--the early 21st Century--when the US is waging war to bring western democracy and capitalism to the middle east.

Milo, speaking for the policy makers, articulates almost all of America's foreign policy concepts in the War on Terror.

Those who go against the party line (e.g., Yossarian) are deemed dangerous and anti-American.

The sad part is summed up by the line, "All we want you to do is...like us!" This seems to be the plea the United States makes to the world as we go abroad to spread our Way of Life to Those Who Don't Have It.

In the end, we naysayers are like Yossarian, rowing alone against the tide.
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