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"Should
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WASHINGTON,
May 6 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The Walt Disney
corporation has blocked distribution of a new movie by Oscar winning
Michael Moore, that criticizes U.S. President George W. Bush and links
his family with Osama bin Laded’s, press reports said Thursday, May
6.
The
principal investor in "Fahrenheit 911", which will be
screened in Cannes this month, is Miramax Films, a division to Disney
co-founded by Harvey Weinstein.
Moore's
agent Ari Emanuel said Disney had pulled out because its involvement
could affect tax breaks the company gets from the state of Florida,
where Bush's brother Jeb is governor, reported the Guardian.
The
movie criticizes the Bush administration handling of the 9/11
terrorist attacks.
The
film is highly critical of Bush's handling of the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks and his actions leading up the attacks.
"This
is not an anti-Bush diatribe. It is, I hope, a skillfully made film
that documents our time," Moore was quoted as saying by the New
York Times Thursday.
"Fahrenheit
911" also highlights the financial connections between the Bush
family and prominent Saudi families, including the family of bin
Laden.
‘Monied’
Interests
In
a statement on his website, Moore, 50, said: "I would have hoped
by now that I would be able to put my work out to the public without
having to experience the profound censorship obstacles I often seem to
encounter".
"At
some point, the question has to be asked, 'Should this be happening in
a free and open society where monied interests essentially call the
shots regarding information that the public is allowed to see?'
"If
this is partisan in any way it is partisan on the side of the poor and
working people in this country ,who provide fodder for this war
machine."
Moore
said he was upset that Miramax would not be the distributor, adding
that it was listed as producer and distributor in his contract.
"No
filmmaker looks forward to this kind of fight," he said.
"You want your film distributed in the way you were told it was
going to be distributed."
Miramax
and Disney have a contractual arrangement that would allow Disney to
prevent distribution under particular circumstances, such as a budget
of more than $30 to $35m or an adult rating, said the Guardian.
‘Stupid
Men’
Moore
used his Oscar win on March 23, to launch a diatribe
on wartime Bush and his invasion of Iraq.
"We
are against this war Mr Bush. Shame on you. Shame on you!" he
addressed an audience of 3,500, including most of Hollywood's top
stars.
On
the eve of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, Moore wrote a letter to
Bush, hitting out his bellicose plans and branding him as a liar.
"Having
survived 440 days of your lying and conniving, I wasn't sure if I
could take much more. So I'm glad to hear that today is Truth Day,
'cause I got a few truths I would like to share with you, " he
told Bush. (The
Letter).
Moore
ran into similar interference with his book "Stupid White
Men."
Publication
was postponed after September 11, but later came out uncensored.
It
almost immediately sold out a first printing of 50,000 and went on to
top the New York Times nonfiction best seller list.