Montreal Gazette

Concussion film wasn’t softened to placate NFL: Sony

- JAKE COYLE

The Will Smith film Concussion was not “softened” to placate the NFL, Sony Pictures insisted Wednesday.

Emails leaked in last year’s hack of Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent revealed executives, lawyers and filmmakers made edits to the film after wrestling with whether Concussion would antagonize the NFL.

After a review of those emails, The New York Times reported that Sony blunted parts of the film to avoid upsetting the NFL. Smith plays the forensic pathologis­t, Dr. Bennet Omalu, who uncovered the fatal effects of repeated head trauma suffered by many NFL players.

But in a statement Wednesday, Sony Pictures called the Times story “misleading” and noted it was written without the benefit of seeing the film.

“As will become immediatel­y clear to anyone actually seeing the movie, nothing with regard to this important story has been ‘softened’ to placate anyone,” said Sony.

Director Peter Landesman, too, is standing by the film.

“We always intended to make an entertaini­ng, hardhittin­g film about Dr. Omalu’s David-and-Goliath story, which played out like a Hollywood thriller,” said Landesman. “Anyone who sees the movie will know that it never once compromise­s the integrity and the power of the real story.”

A handful of football reporters and broadcaste­rs who have seen Concussion, which opens in December, have backed up that claim. NBC’s Bob Costas, in a statement supplied by Sony, said: “It doesn’t appear to me many punches were pulled.”

Sports Illustrate­d’s Peter King also said he’d seen the film. On Twitter, he called it “a huge black eye for the NFL.”

The Sony emails leaked by hackers, however, suggest some alteration­s were made to Concussion. Less clear, in a review of the emails by The Associated Press, is whether they were motivated by cowing to the NFL, an organizati­on known for aggressive image protection, or if the film was tweaked out of the riskadvers­e legal concerns that regularly govern major studio motion picture releases.

One email discusses a top Sony lawyer taking “most of the bite” out of the film “for legal reasons with the NFL.” Another shows Sony marketing chief Dwight Caines discussing “developing messaging with the help of NFL consultant to ensure that we are telling a dramatic story and not kicking the hornet’s nest.”

The film’s trailer, which debuted Monday, dramatizes the NFL as a foreboding opposition to Omalu’s heroic whistleblo­wer. In it, he’s warned: “You’re going to war with a corporatio­n that owns a day of the week.”

The NFL has declined to comment on the film.

 ??  ?? Will Smith
Will Smith

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada