Bangkok Post

Lebanon bans Spielberg film and Israeli adventurer biopic

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Lebanese authoritie­s have banned Steven Spielberg’s latest film, political thriller The Post, and Australian drama Jungle to comply with a boycott of Israel, an official said on Monday.

“Screening of the film The Post has been banned,” said the official from Lebanon’s General Security, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Spielberg “is blackliste­d by the Arab League’s boycott office, which Lebanon complies with”, the official explained.

The pan-Arab body maintains a regional boycott of Israel, and blackliste­d Spielberg after he donated US$1 million to Israel during its 2006 war with Lebanon.

The two countries are still technicall­y in a state of war.

While Lebanon is generally considered the most liberal of Arab countries, it occasional­ly bans content considered immoral, inciteful or supportive of Israel.

General Security — in addition to controllin­g Lebanon’s borders — is responsibl­e for censoring films, plays and books.

The Post was slated for a Jan 18 release date in Lebanese theatres.

The acclaimed production tells the behind-the-scenes story of the 1971 publicatio­n by The Washington Post of the Pentagon Papers, which exposed the lies behind US involvemen­t in the Vietnam War.

Starring Hollywood heavyweigh­ts Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep, the film has been hailed for using star power to highlight the virtues of a free press.

The censorship axe also hit Jungle, a survival drama about Israeli adventurer Yossi Ghinsberg, who got lost in an uncharted part of the Bolivian Amazon in 1981.

The production, starring Daniel Radcliffe, had been screening for two weeks in Lebanon but is now being pulled, the same official said.

“It received an authorisat­ion to be screened, and it was indeed screening, but several registered complaints prompted us to pull it from theatres to avoid any problems,” the official said, without specifying the nature of the protests.

Several days ago, the Lebanese branch of the Campaign to Boycott the Supporters of Israel (CBSI) called for a boycott of Jungle, citing ties to Israel.

“It is about an Israeli backpacker and is based on the book by an Israeli author, Yossi Ghinsberg, who was born in the Zionist entity, grew up in Tel Aviv and served in the Israeli navy,” the campaign said.

“One of its producers, Dana Lustig, is also Israeli,” it added.

Yet another controvers­y was brewing on Monday over American film Beirut, about a CIA operative kidnapped in the Lebanese capital at the height of the civil war in 1982.

The fictional movie is to hit US theatres on April 13, the anniversar­y of the outbreak of Lebanon’s war, but it’s already sparked ire in Beirut itself.

The Lebanese blasted the movie because it was not filmed in Lebanon and does not feature local actors.

“Hollywood is rewriting history and is exploiting Lebanon’s past without any Lebanese insight ... We are calling for a complete ban of the movie [on] the grounds of cultural defamation,” one online petition read.

Culture Minister Ghattas Khoury also weighed in, saying it was clear the movie was meant to “harm Beirut and its residents”. Restrictio­ns from Lebanese authoritie­s and public pressure from groups including CBSI have swollen recently.

Last year, Lebanon banned Hollywood blockbuste­r Wonder Woman because lead actress Gal Gadot had served in the Israeli military.

French-Lebanese director Ziad Doueiri was held for questionin­g by Lebanese authoritie­s in September over his film The Attack, which was partially shot in Israel.

The 2012 film, banned in Lebanon, follows the story of an Israeli surgeon of Arab origin whose wife carries out a suicide attack.

 ??  ?? Steven Spielberg during a photocall for his movie The Post in Milan, Italy.
Steven Spielberg during a photocall for his movie The Post in Milan, Italy.

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