Los Angeles Times

A look at ‘Allen v. Farrow’ upset

The complaints came fast and say less about ‘Allen v. Farrow’ than a changing culture.

- LORRAINE ALI TELEVISION CRITIC

Supporters’ reaction says less about HBO’s series than it does a changing culture.

It didn’t take much to convince Woody Allen defenders that HBO’s fourpart docuseries, “Allen v. Farrow,” was a one-sided hatchet job against the revered filmmaker. The four-part investigat­ive series hadn’t yet premiered when they began tearing down its reexaminat­ion of the allegation that Allen molested Dylan Farrow, his adoptive daughter with actress Mia Farrow, when she was 7 years old.

Angry readers wrote to The Times in response to my favorable review of the series, insisting I was part of a lynch mob: “Shame on you!” Others railed against it on Twitter as an HBO hit piece. Heated arguments ensued across Facebook. Some of the upset was understand­able: Robert Weide, who directed “American Masters — Woody Allen: A Documentar­y,” spoke out in favor of his friend, complainin­g in a blog post that most of the press was guilty of “swallowing the HBO series whole, seemingly thrilled that someone was finally taking Allen down.”

But the immediacy and intensity of the response by those who presumably don’t know Allen personally are puzzling. His apex as a filmmaker was more than 30 years ago. The accusation­s detailed in “Allen v. Farrow” are nearly as old. Why are these fans so invested in defending him?

Part of the answer is simple. The world has changed since the scandal around Allen and Farrow’s breakup in 1992, and even more since the 1970s and ’80s, when Allen’s films often seemed to be driven by an obsession with young — and occasional­ly underage — women. The #MeToo movement has shifted the power dynamics of Hollywood, and changed the perception­s of the American public regarding the role of women on and off screen.

But more than that, it’s flipped the script on who is believed in “he said, she said” cases, making Allen and Farrow’s case the perfect candidate for reconsider­ation under a more modern cultural lens. That reappraisa­l hasn’t just focused on Dylan’s allegation­s. It also includes Allen’s sexual relationsh­ip with, and subsequent marriage to, Farrow’s daughter Soon-Yi Previn, whom she adopted with former husband Andre Previn. Soon-Yi was still in grade school when Farrow began her 12-year relationsh­ip with Allen, and she was 21 when Farrow caught Allen with pornograph­ic Polaroids of her. When Allen went public with the “affair” in 1992, shortly after Dylan first claimed he had abused her and he sued for custody of Dylan, Ronan and Moses Farrow, Allen asserted that Mia had fabricated or coached Dylan’s abuse claims as payback.

Allen’s defenders contend the docuseries, from directors Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering and producer Amy Herdy, is biased because Allen and Previn are not interviewe­d; neither is Moses. (All three declined to be interviewe­d for the series, according to title cards. Allen has repeatedly denied Dylan’s accusation.) These critics have sought to counter the production’s view, which is squarely on the side of Dylan and Mia, by picking apart the evidence presented and noting that details supportive of Allen’s innocence have been glossed over or omitted.

The filmmakers have responded by saying Allen’s account is already widely known and that “Allen v. Farrow” seeks to show another side. Mia and Dylan Farrow are interviewe­d throughout the series, as are several of Farrow’s other children, many family friends, former nannies, prosecutor­s, social workers and more. These, along with court documents, Farrow’s home movies, clips from Allen’s films, excerpts from the audiobook of his memoir and more, add up to a disturbing picture of a predator willing to destroy everyone around him to preserve his reputation as a brilliant filmmaker.

In scrutinizi­ng not only Dylan Farrow’s sexual abuse allegation­s, but also the couple’s bitter custody battle and the start of Allen’s sexual relationsh­ip with Previn, the series constructs a powerful challenge to the narrative that emerged at the time, one shaped by Allen’s own media blitz: Farrow was scorned and Allen was framed. Allen’s influence and celebrity, and Hollywood’s history of siding with talented men over female accusers, helped push his account to the forefront while Mia pleaded with him to keep the fighting out of the newspapers. And that’s where the story stayed — until “Allen v. Farrow” revisited the controvers­y. Whether you accept the series’ argument, in which Dylan and Mia Farrow’s long-dismissed accounts receive a high-profile platform, is for you to decide, based not only on the series but also on your prior knowledge and plenty of Google searches. The problem with many of Allen’s advocates, having brushed off the project before seeing it, is that they clearly made up their minds long ago — before “Allen v. Farrow,” before Dylan Farrow once again raised the accusation in 2014 and 2017.

To these outspoken fans, Allen is a victim of Farrow’s sour grapes, of “cancel culture,” of feminism itself. But the truth underlying their emotional, often highly personal defenses of Allen is that he’s become subject to the forces of change that have finally begun to challenge the old world order, when a girl’s place was tantalizin­g Allen or other actors on screen, no matter how nerdy or neurotic those men might be or how young the woman.

No one knows for sure what really happened in the Allen/Farrow household except the people who survived the nightmare. The rest of us base our opinions on the most compelling argument, and up until now, Allen — a beloved filmmaker in a notoriousl­y sexist business in a patriarcha­l society — has had the megaphone, and the might of the industry, to present his account.

Perhaps these Allen diehards are upset because “Allen v. Farrow” finally explores the other side of the story, and they’re used to a world where women were simply told to shut up.

 ?? HBO ?? A FAMILY PHOTO from the series shows Moses Farrow, left, Soon-Yi Previn, Dylan Farrow, Woody Allen.
HBO A FAMILY PHOTO from the series shows Moses Farrow, left, Soon-Yi Previn, Dylan Farrow, Woody Allen.

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