Before Donald Trump was elected president of the United States of America, most pollsters and pundits thought it couldn't happen. In fact, those who predicted his success were openly laughed at . Amongst the early predictors of Trump's win was none other than Michael Moore, George W. Bush's least favourite filmmaker. Since the summer of 2016 , Moore had been warning us all that Trump would win. As we got even closer to the election date, he gave us a list of reasons why Trump's victory was imminent. Sadly, he was right about just about all of them.

Best known for his award-winning documentaries like Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11, you would be forgiven for not knowing Moore once made a fiction film. Released in 1995, Canadian Bacon made a total of $178,104 dollars (on an $11-million budget) but gained a bit of cult status. Revisiting it in 2017, the movie may have been Moore's first realistic prediction of Trump as president, albeit it an unintentional one.

While Canadian Bacon hasn't aged amazingly—there's a lot of bad slapstick comedy and zany sound effects—Brooklyn-based comedian Slade Sohmer pointed out on Twitter that the film's plot is remarkably similar to what's happening with Trump's recent targeting of Canada for a trade war.

Canadian Bacon stars Alan Alda as a pretty incompetent president of the United States who's not doing great in the polls. (Sound familiar?) At the suggestion of his advisors played by Rip Torn and Kevin Pollack, the president tries to find an enemy to raise his approval rating. (Whoa.) After a failed attempt at starting a new Cold War with the Russians (I wonder why?). While watching television, the president sees an American sheriff (played by John Candy) get into a fight at a hockey game after insulting Canadian beer, which is when he gets the great idea to pick a fight with Canada. ( South Park: The Movie would also mine similar territory.)

While Canadian Bacon isn't about a war that's starts because of bacon (which would be totally fine, actually), it's about making our boring-ass country a real enemy of the United States. And while we've maintained a pretty decent relationship with our only neighbour over the past century, Trump has been engaging in a bombastic rhetoric towards us that feels totally alien to most Canadians.

As pointed out in Sohmer's tweet, _Canadian Bacon'_s plot all sounds a lot like our current overly-dramatic and confusing current battle over softwood lumber and Wisconsin dairy, which seemed to blow up overnight thanks to Trump. While Alda plays the president as a lot less uh, "evil" than Trump, he's very insecure, relying on his advisors to make decisions for him and make him look good (ahem, kind of like Trump).