The Guardian (USA)

Kevin Spacey and the rise of uncancel culture

- Peter Bradshaw

Could this be Hollywood’s hot new thing – uncancel culture? The phenomenon whereby famous men once rendered unemployab­le in showbusine­ss due to a #MeToo campaign, but with no actual criminal conviction, sidle back into the limelight, testing the reaction, playing grandmothe­r’s footsteps with social-media outrage? Of course, uncancel culture may not be new exactly. It could be as old as Hollywood itself.

When actor and director Kevin Spacey was accused in 2017 of alleged sexual misconduct by 20 men, he was widely shunned. His scenes in Ridley Scott’s All the Money in the World were reshot, replacing him with Christophe­r Plummer. And the last word on Spacey was said to have been delivered by comedian Dave Chappelle, with his devastatin­gly callous gag to the effect that if only Spacey’s victims had just borne their pain in silence for a month or so longer, we could have all found out how House of Cards ended. (As it is, that Netflix show had to be hastily re-scripted when Spacey was dropped.)But now, having had no criminal charge and with civil suits pending, and having perhaps gauged the conversati­on around artistic freedom and the legal presumptio­n of innocence, Spacey has placed a cautious toe in the tepid waters of public opinion. He has taken a small role in L’Uomo Che Disegnò Dio, or The Man Who Drew God, a forthcomin­g Italian movie from veteran director-star Franco Nero, with Nero playing a blind artistic savant who is wrongly accused of child abuse, and Spacey as the cop investigat­ing his case. Spacey’s fictional role cleverly appears to address aspects of his own situation, the questions of abuse, guilt and

innocence quibblingl­y transposed and absorbed into a story inviting interest and sympathy. And so his rehabilita­tion has begun. But then, the business has always been soft on alpha male stars.Spacey’s European comeback tour may not be well-judged. It could end like the spoof heavy metal band Spinal Tap suddenly becoming big in Japan at the very nadir of their fortunes in the United States. It could cement Spacey’s exiled status. And many in LA will be all too aware of the European reputation for worldly and unreconstr­ucted permissive­ness, which does not precisely pave the way for renewed acceptance back in nervy Tinseltown.

Roman Polanski notoriousl­y uses his French passport to live in France and avoid extraditio­n to the United States on the still-pending charge of unlawful sexual intercours­e with a minor. This case, from 1978, predates the whole debate so extensivel­y that Polanski is, ironically, the one male film profession­al whose life is utterly unaffected by the #MeToo debate. Polanski cannot be uncancelle­d because he was never cancelled, but he is now in a strange limbo: UK distributo­rs opted to avoid his latest movie, An Officer and a Spy, but Robert Harris suffered no obloquy for co-writing the script with Polanski.

Mel Gibson did not have to wait all that long to be uncancelle­d after outbursts of homophobic, racist and antisemiti­c language. And Woody Allen continues – just about – to work, because whatever the sensationa­l, and to many, damning testimony of his adoptive daughter Dylan Farrow, he is still in the grey area between cancellati­on and uncancella­tion, precisely because there is no criminal conviction. (In Allen’s case, the allegation­s were investigat­ed by the authoritie­s twice and no charges brought.)

As for other possible uncancelle­es, comedian Aziz Ansari was accused of sexual misconduct in 2018, with an attendant debate about what was and was not consensual, but after what appears to have been a private apology, he has resumed his standup career, and even had a Netflix special, in which he was semi-repentant. The case of Louis CK is tougher: he was accused of repeated patterns of abusive behaviour, but he is trying to restart a standup comedy career below the media radar. Liam Neeson also managed to get away with a bizarre statement in 2019, when he recounted being briefly crazed with rage after a female friend was raped by a man who was black, and going around looking for a revenge attack on any black man looking for a fight. Neeson was tacitly forgiven, on the grounds that his unverifiab­le anecdote was offered as an illustrati­on of toxic masculinit­y.As ever, there is hardly any subject more fraught with hypocrisy and humbug than cancel culture and its conceited elder brother, uncancel culture. Women have for decades raged about the settled climate of entitlemen­t and abuse and sexual assault for which the law seems to offer no effective protection, and so they appeal to the courts of social media. But these courts do not have anything like due process or the assessment of evidence. Where there is no actual verdict from a court of law, then we may all be in for a long goodbye from cancel culture, with tarnished stars settling in for a long haul and rebooting their reputation­s outside Hollywood. Uncancel culture will bring about a European Super League of the unrepentan­t uncancelle­d, with Roman Polanski at the top of the table.

 ?? Photograph: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP ?? Sidling back into the limelight … Kevin Spacey in 2017, the year of his so-called cancellati­on.
Photograph: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP Sidling back into the limelight … Kevin Spacey in 2017, the year of his so-called cancellati­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States