Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

How Hollywood is reacting to James Gunn’s Disney firing

- By Michael Cavna

The Washington Post

In the weekend after writer- director James Gunn was ousted from Disney/Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3,” stars from his $1.6 billion film franchise and other Hollywood colleagues have taken various tacks in response.

A few have been vocal on social media, directly protesting Disney’s actions. Others have stayed silent or tweeted more obliquely during the controvers­y — some simply registerin­g their solidarity through a phrase from the “Guardi a n s ” films: “We are Groot.”

Disney fired Mr. Gunn from the third “Guardians” movie Friday following a viral campaign last week spearheade­d by conservati­ve activists who resurfaced Mr. Gunn’s tweets, predominan­tly from between 2008 and 2012. Disney called the tweets — some of which Mr. Gunn had described as provocativ­e “jokes” about rape and pedophilia — “indefensib­le and inconsiste­nt with our studio’s values.” Mr. Gunn had become a particular target of online personalit­ies on the political right after consistent­ly tweeting his criticisms of President Donald Trump.

Fans responded rapidly to Mr. Gunn’s firing. A #RehireJame­sGunn hashtag campaign was launched on Twitter, and a Change.org petition to “Rehire James Gunn” has more than 200,000 signatures. On Saturday, actress Selma Blair, a longtime friend of Mr. Gunn’s, shared the petition on Twitter, though she has since deleted her recent tweets in reference to Mr. Gunn.

In a statement on Friday, Mr. Gunn apologized and said that he accepted Disney’s decision; that for years he has regretted his online attempts at being humorously provocativ­e; and that the rediscover­ed tweets do not reflect who he is today. He previously apologized for his online “jokes” in 2012, after the Mary Sue resurfaced some of his posts that critics called “homophobic and misogynist­ic.”

Dave Bautista, who plays Drax the Destroyer in the “Guardians” “Avengers” films, responded strongly on Twitter, defending the man he has known in recent years.

“James Gunn is one of the most loving,caring,good natured people I have ever met,” tweeted Mr. Bautista, who added, “He’s made mistakes. We all have. Im NOT ok with what’s happening to him.”

Zoe Saldana, who plays Gamora in the “Guardians” and “Avengers” films, tweeted Sunday: “It’s been a challengin­g weekend I’m not gonna lie. I’m pausing myself to take everything in before I speak out of term. I just want everyone to know I love ALL members of my GOTG family.” Mr. Bautista responded to her by tweeting: “When it’s time you will speak from your heart like you always do,” adding the #WeAreGroot hashtag in solidarity.

Karen Gillan, who plays Nebula in the Marvel universe films, simply tweeted, “love to every single member of my GOTG family.”

Pom Klementief­f, who plays the empath Mantis in the MCU, tweeted a short video in which she wrote: “We are Groot. We are a family. We stand together.”

“Guardians” star Chris Pratt did not address Mr. Gunn’s firing directly, instead tweeting Sunday the biblical verse James 1:19, which advises being “slow to speak, slow to anger.”

And Sean Gunn, James Gunn’s brother and a multirole actor in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, wrote on Instagram and Twitter that “working on these movies made my brother a better person,” adding: “I’m quite proud of how kind, generous and compassion­ate andcompass­ionatehe is with the people in his life.”

Addressing the director’s past attempts at humor online, Sean Gunn wrote that “the struggle to find [his] voice was sometimes clunky, misguided or downright stupid, and sometimes wonderful, moving and hilarious,” and noted that while working on the “Guardians” films, he has seen his brother “transform from the guy who made up things to shock people.”

Sean Gunn wrote in an aside that neither he nor their mother ever thought the filmmaker’s “bluer material” was ever his funniest. (Both James and Sean Gunn have described to The Washington Post the abusive nature of the home they grew up in — and how that fostered the director’s “bluer” edge.)

In talking with The Post, James Gunn has also described the “Guardians” films, with their themes of family, as deeply personal projects.

The director was scheduled for a Sony panel Friday evening at San Diego’s Comic-Con Internatio­nal but did not appear.

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