Brian De Palma: Mad At His Distributor, Sick Of The Media, And Over O'Reilly

Huffington Post   |  Katherine Thomson   |   November 14, 2007 03:00 PM


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Brian De Palma, the writer/director of the controversial new film Redacted, opening Friday, took a few minutes to talk to Huffington Post the other day. As a member of the WGA, he certainly has the time, noting, "My pen is down. All pens down."

Redacted, which opens Friday, is inspired by the real-life rape and killing of an Iraqi girl by U.S. soldiers and the murder of her family members.

The film has already been lauded in Europe, bashed in the US, and splashed across Drudge Report, a fact that doesn't surprise De Palma. "I would expect it, because the film shows an aspect of our troops that has not been shown before," he says. "You're going to get a very negative reaction from the right wing. I was more surprised that the film was accepted to every film festival. That's never happened for one of my films."

Not that De Palma's film fest debut was without controversy. At Redacted's Venice Film Festival premiere in August, the director insisted, "The pictures are what will stop the war. If we put these pictures in front of a mass audience, maybe we can stop the war." He also won the festival's award for Best Director.

In the months since De Palma made his opinions known, however, Redacted's ending has been very publicly --and against the directors will -- altered. While the original ending concluded with a montage of dead Iraqi soldiers, the film's distributor, Magnolia Pictures, has since blacked out the faces, citing potential liabilities as none of the dead signed releases. De Palma, Magnolia president Eamonn Bowles, and company owner Mark Cuban publicly sparred over the changed ending in October at the New York Film Festival, at which the redacted Redacted played.

"I fought this right up to the 9th hour," De Palma says. "That was the first time I actually saw [Bowles]. These people were never involved with the making of this at all. We made this film completely with my Canadian crew. I never saw any of them until then.

"[The studio] writes the releases for the pictures we had in the movie. They were well aware we were using this montage," says De Palma. "This montage is all over the internet. That's where I got the idea. This was not a surprise to them. If they had told me we'd need releases for all the war photos I would have recreated all of them, like I did the film. At the 9th hour someone looked and said 'oh my god'. The bottom line is they didn't want to be associated with the pictures. This is not a surprise."

De Palma also vented his displeasure with Mark Cuban. Cuban had claimed that De Palma could buy back the rights of the film and absorb the risk. But says De Palma, "Mark Cuban has never returned my phone calls and there was never an offer like that."

Redacted has brought the Scarface, Casualities of War and Bonfire of the Vanities director renewed attention from the media. Last month Bill O'Reilly called De Palma "a true villain in our country" and said the movie could lead to deaths of U.S. troops.

"That's how these people make a living," De Palma says in response. "They attack me one day and they attack someone else the next day. They just go into one of their right wing rants... They do this every day. This is people stirring the water and on to Lindsay Lohan or some other outrage. I wish it had some meaning."

As for the media, De Palma says, "I'm very disturbed that people try and scare us all the time. I'm tired of being frightened! Now it's the drumbeat to Iran. It never ends."

De Palma also expressed his disappointment with the media's coverage of recent war films, often with Monday morning stories of their box office woes and articles highlighting audience apathy like this, this, and this.

"They seem to relish it," he says. "They are so excited that meaningful movies about our foreign policy are not doing well. They were made with extreme difficulty and financed in weird and creative ways. All made because a movie star decided to push for something he cared about."

"They've been tranquilizing us for how many years? My movie - it costs so little to make it's paid for by the time it hits the screens. These movies were never meant to make hundreds of millions of dollars they were made because they felt strongly about the material. I hope people will join them and learn something."


Redacted premieres free tonight on HDNet and opens Friday.

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I feel for DePalma. He is courageous as hell to make a movie that exposes the dark side of war and how it dehumanizes good people. He is up against the happy faces who want to feed us pablum everyday and make movies that only teenagers will watch. We need to be reminded every day and in every way how Bush has damaged America in the eyes of the world and squandered young lives and money for his failed imperialism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 PM on 11/16/2007

Why in the world would this man make this movie? Is his goal more dead Americans?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 11/16/2007


For once, an artist respects his duty.

I'm really fed up with all these writers and movie-makers who glorify war, its nobleness, and how glamorous it is to be a heroic soldier defending one's nation while being faithful to its human and spiritual values.

For once, here is a movie that shows some truth : that war is the destruction of civilization, and in this chaos young men, who could have otherwise behaved like human beings, are turned into unhuman beings.

Thank you, Mr De Palma, for being an outsider in this world full of Rambo's lovers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:58 PM on 11/15/2007
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Hi friends.

Okay, it's the morning after The Movie.

So what say YOU, HuffPo? Who saw it? Whaddya think?
How 'bout them Americans, eh?


Our lines are open.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 11/15/2007

O'Reilly and some of the FOX Superstars are the type of people that most love to hate.
De Palma is very bright, and talented.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 11/15/2007

People, its a movie. It's not real. It may be based on actually events but that does not mean it really happened the way the director said it did. Look how Syrian, the movie, changed the book by making the Arab leader a nice guy instead of the actual Sadamm Hussain. Remember that movie too was based on actually events.

Not too many people like to view movies with only villians and victims. People like heroes. That is why this movie will bomb.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 11/15/2007

One thing seems to be missing in the foregoing comments. What does the removal of the faces in the ending do to change the movie? I am not sure if this was explained by the writer. If artistic premise suffers, or not, it could be explained. Now, back to the right vs left insanity, while America goes down the toilet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 PM on 11/15/2007

I'm an immigrant to America and I am saddened at the current state of this great nation. America is an empire exhibiting the classic signs of decadence: rampant ignorance and violence, apathy, an obsession with ludicrous entertainment, a pervasive close-mindedness to the world outside, and a delusional belief of being the best. But this nation was founded on some of the most advanced social and spiritual principles on Earth -- that's why your Constitution is such a revered document. The principles at the core of America have been weakened but are not totally lost. Let's peacefully revolt and take back America from the ignorant, from corporations, from its own arrogance and hubris. America doesn't have to be an empire... but it can be a true world leader again someday if it finds its way again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 11/15/2007

Mr. De Palma, this corporate America run by the corporations under the veneer of elections in an attempt to defuse the public furor while they largely control who is elected. This trick was invented by the Romans. Romans were interested in control and stability, not democracy....just like corporate America. And part of this mechanism is to control and calibrate what public is allowed to see.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 PM on 11/15/2007

I really liked what Brian de Palma had to say until I realized that this is the guy who directed Scarface and other violent movies. Then I realized what a fucking hypocrite he is. He's fed into and profited from our culture of violence for far too many years for me to take this seriously.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 11/15/2007

CTM1978 - I agree 100% with your opinion.
Strange that so many Americans are so brainwashed and most have not been out of their country but yet they talk like they know!
Every war produces scum and this war is no
different. I believe the many suicides occur now because the soldiers saw the worst and cannot live with what they had to do. There is a reason why the press was not allowed to elaborate, remember Fallujah twice! The masses are not used to see atrocities. Go ahead and
demonstrate a real water boarding on TV!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:39 AM on 11/15/2007

I'm going to buy that Scarface t-shirt I had my eye on.

Official merchandise, of course, so De Palma gets a little of the money I spend.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 AM on 11/15/2007

This is very reminiscent of the Woody Allen dialogue where two people are complaining about a restaurant.
"The food is horrible" says the first.
The sedond responds by saying, "yes, and the portions are so small."
DePalma has had abundant opportunity to buck the system as other major cogs in the system have done with some success. Perhaps we'll see a more mature and intellectually driven kind of movie from him in the future and we'll see his old overlord schlockmeisters left to cart their wheelbarrows of money off to buy a loaf of bread.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 11/15/2007
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Do not waste your efforts on trying to sway Bush apologists, Fox "news" watching NASCAR screw-heads... this delusional mob exists on moronic propaganda delivered in 30 second sound bytes - reality and the truth means nothing to these idiots.

keep making movies that matter... it seems to be a dying art.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 11/15/2007
- KBAR I'm a Fan of KBAR permalink
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And they will stay away in droves!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 AM on 11/15/2007
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