The Borneo Post

Hollywood wracked by chaos in aftermath of sex scandals

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LOS ANGELES: Projects are shelved, fi lm releases cancelled, sets shuttered, studios threatened, the Oscars rattled — this is the chaos confrontin­g Hollywood following sex scandals that have brought down power players like Harvey Weinstein, Kevin Spacey and Brett Ratner.

In the month since The New Yorker and The New York Times published allegation­s of serial predatory behaviour by producer Weinstein — some 100 women have now accused him of misconduct ranging from harassment to rape — people who said they had been victimised have felt emboldened to voice allegation­s against men who had been seen as untouchabl­e.

Spacey, a two-time Oscar winner, and Ratner, a blockbuste­r director, have also been accused of sexual transgress­ions, while other actors, managers and agents are in the hot seat as well.

“Who’s next?” the Los Angeles Times asked on Sunday.

“There’s been scandals in Hollywood since the silent movie age but it was one person or one incident,” said Tim Gray, an editor at the entertainm­ent trade magazine Variety.

“I’ve been at Variety for 30 years, I’ve never seen something like this,” he said.

Toxic

This is kind of a lesson for everyone in Hollywood. You know what? Everybody is replaceabl­e. Tim Gray, editor at entertainm­ent magazine Variety

Every project linked to The Weinstein Company, co-founded by Harvey Weinstein and his brother Bob, is now toxic, whereas a few months ago such a relationsh­ip was a mark of prestige.

Famed director Oliver Stone, who initially defended Weinstein, has withdrawn from the “Guantanamo” television series that they had been collaborat­ing on.

The fi rst Weinstein Company fi lm to come out following the scandal, “Amityville: The Awakening,” brought in a measly US$ 742 in its one- day theatrical release, according to Box Office Mojo.

Weinstein’s company, already weakened by a series of flops, is on the verge of bankruptcy.

Other powerful studios fi nd themselves in turmoil, such as the entertainm­ent arm of internet giant Amazon, whose chairman Roy Price resigned last month after he was suspended following an accusation of sexual harassment.

Price’s ouster contribute­d to the collapse of an untitled David O. Russell drama series, set to star Oscar winners Robert De Niro and Julianne Moore, which had been a co-production with The Weinstein Company.

“( With) the Weinstein debacle and another issue at Amazon, everyone kind of walked away and torpedoed it,” Moore said in an interview.

A screenwrit­er who had been working for months on a serial for Amazon told AFP the project has lost momentum.

Streaming giant Netfl ix is also in crisis. Kevin Spacey, the star of its fl agship series “House of Cards,” faces spiralling accusation­s including that he attempted to rape a 15-year- old boy in New York.

The actor has been booted from the show and production of the last and fi nal season, which had been due to air in 2018, has been suspended.

Netfl ix also scuttled the release of “Gore,” a biopic about American writer Gore Vidal, a fi lm co-produced by and starring Spacey.

‘Everyone is replaceabl­e’

At Warner Bros., the scandal surroundin­g fi lmmaker Ratner (“Rush Hour,” “The Revenant,” “Horrible Bosses,”) has threatened a co-fi nancing deal between the studio and Ratner’s RatPac Entertainm­ent worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The studio has also removed Ratner from the producer role of a much- anticipate­d adaption of Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “The Goldfi nch.”

“This is kind of a lesson for everyone in Hollywood. You know what? Everybody is replaceabl­e,” Gray said.

The Oscar race has also been shaken up. Sony Pictures was betting on Spacey as its awards season candidate for his role in Ridley Scott’s “All the Money in the World,” but has since scratched that plan.

With four months to go before the Academy Awards, “who knows what we’re gonna fi nd about other people in the race,” Gray said.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences expelled Weinstein from its ranks, but has kept a low profi le as the number of its members and honorees facing troubling accusation­s grows.

People in behind-the- scenes roles in entertainm­ent haven’t avoided scrutiny either. Agent Tyler Grasham of APA has been fi red from his job, while manager David Guillod from Primary Wave Entertainm­ent was forced to resign, both following sexual assault allegation­s. Meanwhile actor Danny Masterson is under fi re after four women said he had raped them.

“This says there’s something wrong with this industry” that wants to be moral and progressiv­e, Gray said.

Hollywood has struggled with diversity and accusation­s of discrimina­tion against racial minorities and women, “but this is taking it a step further. It’s not we’re ignoring people, it’s we’re abusing people.”

Gray can’t imagine Weinstein, Spacey or Ratner ever working again in entertainm­ent.

“Hollywood loves a comeback story, loves to forgive... ( but) this is not something you can forgive.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Harvey Weinstein Kevin Spacey Bret Ratner
Harvey Weinstein Kevin Spacey Bret Ratner

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