Where to Invade Next
Where to Invade Next (2015)

Where to Invade Next

2/5
(23 votos)
7.5IMDb63Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
24 April 2016 USA USD 3,820,195
17 April 2016 USA USD 3,801,054
10 April 2016 USA USD 3,768,788
3 April 2016 USA USD 3,700,900
27 March 2016 USA USD 3,603,340
20 March 2016 USA USD 3,464,252
13 March 2016 USA USD 3,263,766
6 March 2016 USA USD 2,971,046
28 February 2016 USA USD 2,600,973
21 February 2016 USA USD 1,991,445
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
19 February 2016 USA USD 564,575 275
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
24 April 2016 USA USD 5,346 15
17 April 2016 USA USD 11,813 23
10 April 2016 USA USD 35,166 51
3 April 2016 USA USD 55,750 63
27 March 2016 USA USD 68,220 68
20 March 2016 USA USD 110,979 110
13 March 2016 USA USD 177,832 151
6 March 2016 USA USD 228,617 150
28 February 2016 USA USD 380,540 212
21 February 2016 USA USD 564,575 275

Comentarios

Greetings again from the darkness. We haven't heard much from director Michael Moore since his 2009 film Capitalism: A Love Story … and not many people have complained.

I'm not going to hide the fact that I'm extremely biased when it comes to Michael Moore. I love all his documentaries, and his liberal views closely align with mine, so I just want to say Where To Invade Next is amazing, emotionally moving, and Moore's most positively infectious film.

The infant terrible of American documentaries, Michael Moore, has regularly savaged American industry and culture from General Motors to McDonald's for their excesses. His newest diatribe, Where to Invade Next, is his best, clearest, and least strident of all.

Bernie Sanders should use this documentary in his campaign because nearly everything Moore shows ,Bernie wants to realize in this country.Michael Moore has no problem convincing me.

9.5 of 10.

My husband and l saw this film yesterday in a wonderful old time theater in Royal Oak, MI that had to seat at least 400 people. With over half the seats filled for the matinée, l was struck by the age, gender, and race diversity of the attendees!

This film somehow manages to tear deeply into painful truths about the US in regard to unjust domestic policies with our criminal justice system, our exploitative student loaning process, and our long history with racism, yet somehow Moore manages to leave the viewer feeling optimistic. Moore's growth as a filmmaker is so evident here.

Michael Moore seems a bit tired in this one. It's obvious that he's growing weary of trying to change the minds of a vast and brutal herd of mean people who won't change.

I was angry for many parts of Where to Invade Next. It wasn't at Michael Moore, though I'm sure that if people come in who already have a predisposition or strong feelings about the man then it will come out that way, and this certainly won't change that.

Comentarios