Monday, May 14, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com SHAY SPANIOLA/Daily Steps leading up to Wazoo Records display the work of Richard Ahern who lived in a loft above the store and paid his rent by painting this wural until his death in 2004. film he felt that he could make MOORE "Roger & Me" without worrying From page 1 that it would be criticized for not beinga traditional documentary. Moore said he became acquainted "Who gives anyone the right to with Hara's work while editing his say this is not a documentary? It's first documentary, "Roger & Me." the same as the one in third grade While taking a break from editing who said this is not a poem," said the documentary about General Moore. "They're the same people Motors and its CEO Roger Smith, who have been on you since you Moore attended a screening of were nine or 10 and told you this is Hara's, "The Emperor's Naked Army how you construct a poem or this is Marches On" at the American Film how you construct a story or this is Institute at the Kennedy Center. how you paint the sky blue." "I was just riveted," Moore said. Hara's style of documentary is "It was like I had this soul brother "the kind of film that makes activ- in Japan." ists act," said Nornes. Moore said after watching Hara's He referred to Hara's film "Good- bye CP," which put a spotlight on the victims of cerebral palsy and other physical handicaps, people who are generally kept hidden in Japan. Hara, who used a translator throughout the event, said he does not follow predetermined steps in making a film because documen- taries take shape during the actual filming and the experiences he has duringthe process. Moore said his filmmaking pro- cess often takes a similar course because the question he focuses on at the beginning of filming often changes duringthe production. He said when he started filming "Bowling for Columbine," a 2002 documentary about the 1999 Col- DISTURBING From page 3 ingwas excessive and senseless. He said he did have an experi- ence with a student whose long history of psychological instabil- ity came through in writing. "It was not my job to be their therapist," Taylor said. "It was my E EN Tjob to point out what was working particularly well in their poems and to encourage that expression W RATES of their genius." Taylor said some of his stu- with dents who wrote dark pieces later turned out to be among the more & r eachugifted writers in their classes. Violent themes shouldn't be s center discouraged in student writing because they are often used in lit- erature "to make a comment on the commodities that govern our lives and our culture," he said. Taylor said the most disturb- ing content he encounters in his classes comes from younger writ- ers who are new to college life and experimenting with their self- er Dr. 74.4 .9 9 expression for the first time. He said topics like self-mutila- tion, eating disorders and depres- sion most often raise concerns, umbine High School shootings and their place within, America's gun culture, he felt that there needed to be stronger gun control laws in the United States. During a visit to Canada Moore said he learned that Canadians own more guns per capita than Ameri- cans, but have lower gun violence rates. He then changed his focus in order to investigate the reasons for this discrepancy, he said. Hara said when he makes a docu- mentary, he does it to find answers to questions he has about his iden- tity more than for social justice. Moore's documentaries have been seen as appealing only to the political left, but his new film might not engage the same audience. "If you put politics first in a film, youwillendupwithacrappymovie," Moore said. Me said "Sicko" would not just be a movie about health care because the American public is already aware thatctheir health-care system can be improved. Although Moore was reluctant to give away too many details about "Sicko," he said he has taken a new approach to filmmaking this time. He said he wants to present the film's subject separate from the political dispute already surround- ing the issue of healthcare. "It would be great if this movie would ignite something through its art and not its politics," he said. but he thinks instances where a student's work in an English class would move the professor to inter- vene are rare. In the case of disturbing student writing, Taylor said he believes most problems can be resolved through a conversation between the writer and professor. LSA junior Jacob Elkon, who is enrolled in a creative writing class during spring term, said a student's presentation-of a violent piece to the class often indicates his or her intention in writing it. "It depends on how they say it," Elkon said. "You can tell the dif- ference between a normal story and if they are saying it with a vengeance." Elkon said if a classmate's work alarmed him he would call atten- tion to the work's disturbing themes during classroom discus- sion. But Taylor maintained that it is important to have freedom of expression in creative writing courses. "You don't want to get so fear- ful that you in any way suppress students from self-expression or finding their voice in creative writing," he said. 4 I 4 I 4 4