In the most basic sense, “The Corporation” is a documentary made to bring awareness to the impact of corporations on society. The film uses many analogies to bring across this point. The first analogy being that corporations are people. If corporations were a person, they would be comparable to psychopaths in certain regards to self-interest and greed. They then go on to compare corporations to sharks saying that corporations are strictly money hungry in the same sense that sharks are generally just hungry for anything. They use this comparison to show that corporations, as well as “sharks”, have little-to-no moral value for anything, and that they do not care about the consequences of their actions as long as they get what they want (The Corporation). The second analogy used is that if corporations are sharks, then the leaders of corporations are similar to owners of a slave plantation. This analogy is used because, just as slave owners do, leaders of a corporations infringe upon peoples’ basic human rights. They exploit people for their own benefit. The writers of “The Corporation” use these analogies in order to simplify the way corporations exploit the people. This helps us, as the viewer, to understand how corporations affect and essentially run our society (The Corporation). Aside from the use of analogies, juxtaposition or the act of closely contrasting two items together, was another key theme used throughout “The Corporation”. During the documentary an interview was conducted with Michael Moore, a filmmaker and liberal political activist, which then right after was contrasted with an interview conducted with Robert Keyes, CEO of the Canadian Council for International Business. Michael Moore very obviously stated his opinion on corporations and how their power must be kept in check by the people. In contrast, Robert Keyes is a corporate man who believes that corporate America is not “trying to take over th