-Caveat Lector-

Interesting item for after all these years you find the works of
Shakespeare being squelched?   Does this sound familiar?

Recently an ADL connected individual wanted Mercant of Menace changed -
and for instance, Shylock who wanted the pound of flesh - well, he was
only kidding got to rewrite this script.

But my goodness - Othello?   A black raping a white woman?   Can't have
that can we Mr. Weinstein - might hurt your "political" career for the
big potential takeover?

Have you noticed even the Disney Channel has become "earthy".......these
bastards even stole Mickey Mouse from the kids...Disney looks like
propaganda tool for UN and NWO......and Gay Pride Inc. is way out in
front with their little   lavendar flag.

Watch your back Mr. Bush......

Saba


April 20, 2001|12:01 PM


Suing for $18 million, Producer Claims Harvey Weinstein Waylaid His
"Controversial" Film
by Rebecca Traister

Senator Weinstein? President Weinstein? Is there more to Harvey
Weinstein's political ambitions than writing checks and holding
fund-raisers for his favorite Democratic candidates?

That's what's hinted at in a complaint filed on April 17 in State
Supreme Court in Manhattan. The suit, brought by O, L.L.C., the producer
of O, claims that Tim Blake Nelson's controversial film adaptation of
Shakespeare's Othello was never released by Miramax because Mr.
Weinstein feared its violent content would undermine his political
aspirations.

The lawsuit was filed against Miramax Films, its parent, the Walt Disney
Company, Miramax co-chairman Harvey Weinstein and his brother, Bob
Weinstein, the chief executive of Dimension Films, the division of
Miramax that was slated to release O.

One of the complaint's key allegations describes a March 2001 meeting in
Los Angeles' Peninsula Hotel between Harvey Weinstein and O producer
Eric Gitter. The meeting was precipitated by repeated delays in the
release of the film, which is set in a modern private high school. In
addition to a violent conclusion, which remains faithful to
Shakespeare's four-character body count, O depicts a graphic interracial
rape scene.


Dimension initially planned to release the film on Oct. 17, 1999. It
received a completed cut of the film in early summer of that year, just
a month after the Columbine High School massacre and on the cusp of the
2000 Presidential race.
The Peninsula Hotel meeting described in the suit took place just before
the terms of Miramax's agreement to release O were about to expire.

The suit alleges that Harvey Weinstein said he wanted to license O's
distribution rights to another company rather than release it under the
Miramax shingle.

According to the complaint, Mr. Weinstein cited his "ardent" support of
the Democratic Party, his role as the party's "largest" fund-raiser, and
indicated "that he had political aspirations and that his current
personal agenda included more than a motivation to successfully release
quality films."

The suit goes on to claim that Mr. Weinstein explained to Mr. Gitter
that the violence depicted in the film made it "potentially
'controversial'" and that "he had no intention of allowing the Film to
be released under his � Miramax label."
Miramax, in fact, soon transferred distribution rights to O to Lions
Gate Films, in an announcement that was reported in the April 11 issue
of Daily Variety. But the transfer was allegedly made over the
objections of the film's producer. (Lions Gate is reportedly set to
release O on 1,500 screens in August.)

During that same L.A. meeting, the suit claims, Mr. Weinstein allegedly
"overtly threatened" Mr. Gitter, saying that unless the producer agreed
to allow Miramax to sell the film to another company for future release
under a different title, "he and his brother, Robert Weinstein, would
see to it that the Film was released on 1,000 poorly venued screens at
inopportune times with no public relations support."

The suit also says he threatened that "he would invest the required
print and advertising funds in an inappropriate manor [sic] and would
'bury' the Film in the press."

Mr. Gitter's recollection of the meeting, as described in the suit,
concluded with his assertion that Mr. Weinstein threatened that "he and
his brother would see to it that 'no one in Hollywood' would do any
future business with Mr. Gitter, personally."

A Miramax spokeswoman declined to respond to the specific issues in the
suit, including the allegations of Mr. Weinstein's "political
aspirations," noting that it would be inappropriate to comment on a
legal matter. But the company issued a statement: "We do not believe
that disputes should be litigated in the press.

We understand that the complaint has just been filed with the court and
will respond as appropriate. We are confident that the court will find
that we have fulfilled our obligation and acted appropriately. In
licensing the film to Lions Gate, we wanted to continue to act in a
socially responsible manner and to not have the profile of our company
stand in the way of a film we admire."

The suit was first filed on March 19. O, L.L.C. later filed a beefed-up
complaint on April 17. The complaint cites breach of contract by Miramax
for failing to release O before March 17, 2001, claims irreparable harm
to the film and its chance for commercial success, and asks for $17.85
million in damages�$10 million for compensatory and $7.85 million for
punitive damages.

It is not clear whether the suit will affect Lions Gate's plans to
release the film. A spokesman for the distribution company did not
return calls for comment.
O was filmed in early 1999, with a cast that included then-unknown teen
actors Julia Stiles, Josh Hartnett, Mekhi Phifer and Rain Phoenix in
leading roles, and veteran actors Martin Sheen and John Heard in
supporting roles. Ms. Stiles has since proven her box-office mettle with
the recent success of Save the Last Dance. Mr. Hartnett will soon appear
in the highly anticipated Pearl Harbor. The film's director, Tim Blake
Nelson, also an actor and playwright, starred this winter in Joel and
Ethan Coen's O Brother, Where Art Thou? and has since completed the
editing of The Grey Zone, a Holocaust drama starring Harvey Keitel.
Miramax was initially so eager to release the film in the midst of Oscar
season that they asked Mr. Nelson to rush a completed print to
Dimension. Mr. Nelson did�just one month after the April 20,

1999, massacre at Columbine High School. Oscar season came and
went�twice�and the film has remained shelved.

The Observer wrote about the delays on Nov. 13, 2000, quoting sources
who speculated that they were related to Mr. Weinstein's deep
involvement with the Gore-Lieberman campaign. The campaign, heavily
supported by Hollywood, was struggling to distance itself from film
violence.

The incident is reminiscent of Miramax's involvement with another
controversial film, Dogma. In 1999, Miramax�perhaps mindful of its
relationship with the wholesome Walt Disney image�decided against
distributing Kevin Smith's religious comedy and licensed U.S.
distribution rights to Lions Gate Films.

The suit said Miramax had bought rights to O and agreed to distribute it
on 1,000 screens and spend at least $10 million on print and advertising
promotion.

Strangely, according to the suit, Miramax plans to retain control of the
marketing of O, despite the film's transfer to Lions Gate.

Noting that O, "like almost all Films, has only one opportunity to make
a commercially successful theatrical release," the suit charged that
Miramax's delayed release "has missed the opportunity to capitalize on
the heightened popularity of the Film's cast," has allowed the popular
music on the accompanying soundtrack to slip out of date, and has cost
O's creators money and exposure. In addition, it charged Miramax and its
divisions with denigrating the film, further hurting its box office
potential, in "negative statements and quotes about the Film that have
been published in The Daily News, Variety, The New York Post, and The
New York Observer."

Neither the producers nor their attorney would comment beyond the
contents of the suit.

Oddly, the suit claims that while Miramax has displayed a "lack of
motivation to exploit the Film and outright hostility towards the Film"
in the United States and publicly declared its reluctance to release the
film here, the company "has begun and continues to exploit the Film in
foreign markets" by licensing to foreign companies rights to distribute
the film outside the U.S.

Galotti's Paradise Lost

Talkmedia president Ron Galotti was acting like a proud father at a
recent screening party for Paperboys, a 40-minute documentary directed
by Mike Mills and "conceived of" by Jack Spade designer Andy Spade. The
short film deals with paper boys in Stillwater, Minn., and though
neither Talk (The Transom's former employer) nor Mr. Galotti had
anything to do with its production or distribution�he and Tina Brown
were simply hosting the evening�Mr. Big clearly endorsed its depiction
of no-frills suburban bliss. "We forget what real America is all about,"
he said. "We live in this vertical world called New York, and we forget
about the real world."

For the young Mr. Galotti, the "real world" was just outside of
Peekskill, N.Y.�light years away from his current car-serviced
existence. "I had two brothers and a sister. My brothers and I slept in
one room, and my sister slept in the dining room" in their two-bedroom
house, he explained. "We thought the guy across the street was rich
because he had a new lawnmower."

The Transom asked Mr. Galotti how he felt about his 2-year-old daughter
spending her formative years in Manhattan. "My wife and I talk about it
continually," conceded the former Vogue publisher. He almost appeared to
regret the breezy future of his loaded progeny.

"Every one of those kids [in Paperboys] has that glitter in their eye.
We forget what it looks like here; it's innocence.

"The real tragedy is these 8-year-old kids with their legs crossed,
drinking cappuccinos," said Mr. Galotti with a shake of his shiny head.

Andy Spade's wife, Kate, the semi-affordable-handbag designer, joined
the conversation. Dressed in a neat black pleated skirt and top, sparkly
starfish brooch and a faceful of freckles, the twinkly Ms. Spade looked
as innocent as any of the kids Mr. Galotti was kvelling over. She
downplayed her involvement in Paperboys, which will run at the Screening
Room every Sunday from April 29 to June 3, claiming that all she did was
"sit there and scream, 'I love it!'"
Ms. Spade said that her brother had been a paper boy while she earned
milk-shake money by baby-sitting. Her husband, puckish in a plaid suit
jacket, approached the group just as Mr. Galotti was tracing his early
career path. "I cut lawns, I waited on tables," the media macher ticked
off, "but I never thought we were poor."
"Kids don't know," chimed in Mr. Spade.
"We thought we were rich!" said Mr. Galotti. He leaned in, earnestly
proclaiming that this was "no bullshit now, really," and filled out the
picture of the two-bedroom house, explaining that his cousins eventually
moved in with them.
Mr. Spade nodded understandingly. The men exchanged a look and then
said, almost simultaneously, "It's about love. It's about love."
Soon, Mr. Galotti was getting downright emotional. "The thing I want for
my daughter, bar nothing, is to be happy. That's all. I don't care about
the private schools and four hours of homework."
So why are you boys in the Tribeca Film Center, being handed sushi-grade
tuna and apple martinis, instead of cracking a Bud and firing up the
grill in the backyard? "There are a lot of great things about New York,"
said Mr. Spade. He paused. "But there's definitely a sense of loss. You
lose a piece of your past. I hope I can let my kids play outdoors."
Mr. Galotti piped up again: "I want to give my daughter a sense of that.
A sense of the neighbors."
"You know, we didn't have to lock our doors," Mr. Spade said with an
almost incredulous look.
Mr. Galotti didn't miss a beat. "We didn't even have a key! There was no
key to the door of my house!"
Mr. Spade recalled the sense of security he felt when on his childhood
paper route, long before he started designing $85 messenger bags. "Some
of the older people, if they're lonely, they invite you in." Don't try
that on Greenwich Street, kiddo.
You may reach Rebecca Traister via email at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
back to top
This column ran on page 3 in the 4/23/2001 edition of The New York
Observer.
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