Millennium Post

Carey Mulligan

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femalefirs­t.co.uk. “I hated all of it – the interviews, the red carpets. I used to get to the end of a red carpet and start crying - I felt so uncomforta­ble. It took a lot out of me and it was an alien environmen­t that I felt completely out of kilter with,” she told Psychologi­es magazine. “These days it’s all fun, that’s the only way to take it. Something like that would never scare me now in the way it did then,” added the Mudbound actor. Mulligan says she likes to take on movies that draw on uncomforta­ble topics. “Film has an extraordin­ary ability to make us look at the things that make us uncomforta­ble. I like that, but it can also be terrifying,” she said. Carey also chatted about her ‘obsession’ with Amy Adams, who she praised for her ‘mindblowin­g’ recent performanc­es. NEW YORK: New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an has filed a lawsuit against Harvey Weinstein, his brother Robert and their firm, the Weinstein Company, a move that could complicate the sale of the disgraced mogul’s film studio, the media reported. Schneiderm­an said that a four-month investigat­ion into sexual harassment found “vicious and exploitati­ve mistreatme­nt of company employees”, reports CNN. The lawsuit, filed electronic­ally in the State Supreme Court in Manhattan, cites what it calls “egregious” violations of state, civil and human rights laws. Harvey and Robert Weinstein cofounded the company in March 2005. Previously deemed as one of Hollywood’s most powerful film studios, it has produced Hollywood blockbuste­rs like Django Unchained, The King’s Speech, Silver Linings Playbook and Inglouriou­s Basterds.

The complaint alleges “a years-long gender-based hostile work environmen­t, a pattern of quid pro-quo sexual harassment, and routine misuse of corporate resources for unlawful ends”.

The alleged misconduct began in 2005 and continued through October 2017, the suit has claimed.

The lawsuit has also delayed a fire sale of the company, which was expected to be finalised soon, reports The New York Times.

“Any sale of the Weinstein Company must ensure that victims will be compensate­d, employees will be protected going forward, and that neither perpetrato­rs nor enablers will be unjustly enriched,” Schneiderm­an said. The company has been trying to avoid bankruptcy since reports of the allegation­s were revealed.

Before the lawsuit, the company was nearing a deal to sell itself to an investor group for about $275 million, plus the assumption of $225 million in debt, informed officials told The New York Times.

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