The Jerusalem Post

Jewish celebs slam new Mel Gibson film

- • By AMY SPIRO

Mel Gibson is set to write and direct a remake of a Western film with the backing of media giant Warner Bros.

The news was greeted with some derision by Jewish celebritie­s who haven’t quite forgotten the widely reported behavior by the famed actor and director.

It was reported on Monday that Gibson will co-write and direct a remake of The Wild Bunch, a 1969 film noted for its graphic violence.

Jewish actress and comedian Sarah Silverman shared a link to the news on Twitter, writing: “F***ing Jews. The Jews are responsibl­e for all the wars in the world.” Silverman was referencin­g the statement made by Gibson when he was arrested for drunk driving back in 2006.

Actor Joshua Malina, best known for his appearance­s in The West Wing and Scandal,

also commented on the news on Twitter: “This guy is a racist, homophobic, misogynist­ic antisemite who pleaded no contest to a charge of misdemeano­r battery,” Malina wrote Monday. “What the f*** is wrong with Hollywood?”

And celebritie­s weren’t the only ones who found the news rather distastefu­l.

“No Jews in The Wild Bunch

this time around, I guess,” wrote Washington Post reporter Mark Berman.

Huffington­Post.com reporter Yashar Ali commented, “Mel Gibson admitted to domestic violence, repeatedly used racial epithets on tape, and has a history of making antisemiti­c statements. Meanwhile there is a long list of women in entertainm­ent who don’t have careers anymore simply because they were labeled ‘difficult’ by men.”

Anne Helen Petersen, a writer for Buzzfeed, lamented “Hollywood’s convenient amnesia.”

For close to a decade Gibson, once a celebrated actor and director, stayed largely out of the limelight following a series of scandals, including a drunk-driving arrest and a no-contest plea to charges of battery against his ex-girlfriend. The Jewish community has long been wary of Gibson, in particular since the 2004 Passion of the Christ, which many said reinforced antisemiti­c portrayals of Jewish responsibi­lity for the death of Jesus.

In a 2006 interview, Gibson – whose father is an outspoken Holocaust denier – blamed his drunken rant earlier that year on both the Jewish community’s reaction to the 2004 film and to Israel’s conflict with Lebanon at the time.

Over the past few years, however, Gibson has returned to the spotlight, winning an Oscar nomination for directing 2016’s Hacksaw Ridge and appearing in the feel-good comedy Daddy’s Home 2 last year.

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