Blind Activists Plan Protest Of Julianne Moore Movie

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BEN NUCKOLS | September 30, 2008 07:28 PM EST | AP

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In this image released by Miramax Pictures, Julianne Moore, right, and Mark Ruffalo are shown in a scene from "Blindness." (AP Photo/Miramax Films, Ken Woroner)

BALTIMORE — Blind people quarantined in a mental asylum, attacking each other, soiling themselves, trading sex for food. For Marc Maurer, who's blind, such a scenario _ as shown in the movie "Blindness" _ is not a clever allegory for a breakdown in society.

Instead, it's an offensive and chilling depiction that Maurer fears could undermine efforts to integrate blind people into the mainstream.

"The movie portrays blind people as monsters, and I believe it to be a lie," said Maurer, president of the Baltimore-based National Federation of the Blind. "Blindness doesn't turn decent people into monsters."

The organization plans to protest the movie, released by Miramax Films, at 75 theaters around the country when it's released Friday. Blind people and their allies will hand out fliers and carry signs. Among the slogans: "I'm not an actor. But I play a blind person in real life."

The movie reinforces inaccurate stereotypes, including that the blind cannot care for themselves and are perpetually disoriented, according to the NFB.

"We face a 70 percent unemployment rate and other social problems because people don't think we can do anything, and this movie is not going to help _ at all," said Christopher Danielsen, a spokesman for the organization.

"Blindness" director Fernando Meirelles, an Academy Award nominee for "City of God," was shooting on location Thursday and unavailable for comment, according to Miramax. The studio released a statement that read, in part, "We are saddened to learn that the National Federation of the Blind plans to protest the film `Blindness.'"

The NFB began planning the protests after seven staffers, including Danielsen, attended a screening of the movie in Baltimore last week. The group included three sighted employees.

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"Everybody was offended," Danielsen said.

Based on the 1995 novel by Nobel Prize winner Jose Saramago, "Blindness" imagines a mysterious epidemic that causes people to see nothing but fuzzy white light _ resulting in a collapse of the social order in an unnamed city. Julianne Moore stars as the wife of an eye doctor (Mark Ruffalo) who loses his sight; she feigns blindness to stay with her husband and eventually leads a revolt of the quarantined patients.

The book was praised for its use of blindness as a metaphor for the lack of clear communication and respect for human dignity in modern society.

Miramax said in its statement that Meirelles had "worked diligently to preserve the intent and resonance of the acclaimed book," which it described as "a courageous parable about the triumph of the human spirit when civilization breaks down."

Maurer will have none of it.

"I think that failing to understand each other is a significant problem," he said. "I think that portraying it as associated with blindness is just incorrect."

The protest will include pickets at theaters in at least 21 states, some with dozens of participants, timed to coincide with evening showtimes. Maurer said it would be the largest protest in the 68-year history of the NFB, which has 50,000 members and works to improve blind people's lives through advocacy, education and other ways.

The film was the opening-night entry at the Cannes Film Festival, where many critics were unimpressed.

After Cannes, Meirelles retooled the film, removing a voice-over that some critics felt spelled out its themes too explicitly.

Meirelles told The Associated Press at Cannes that the film draws parallels to such disasters as Hurricane Katrina, the global food shortage and the cyclone in Myanmar.

"There are different kinds of blindness. There's 2 billion people that are starving in the world," Meirelles said. "This is happening. It doesn't need a catastrophe. It's happening, and because there isn't an event like Katrina, we don't see."

___

Miramax is a division of The Walt Disney Co.

BALTIMORE — Blind people quarantined in a mental asylum, attacking each other, soiling themselves, trading sex for food. For Marc Maurer, who's blind, such a scenario _ as shown in the movie "Bl...
BALTIMORE — Blind people quarantined in a mental asylum, attacking each other, soiling themselves, trading sex for food. For Marc Maurer, who's blind, such a scenario _ as shown in the movie "Bl...
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The real tragic thing in this movie isthat a beautiful redhead feels the need to go blonde.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 AM on 10/01/2008
- MikeDu I'm a Fan of MikeDu 147 fans permalink
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Have you noticed that 90% of the time these various protest groups get the film (which they invariably have never actually watched) wrong? They protest the 'degrading depiction' of X, Y or Z and almost always X,Y, or Z comes off considerably more noble in the films than those around them. Examples come easily to mind: "The Last Temptation of Christ" by Scorcezi, a little British comic farce named "the Pope Must Die", the entire "Harry Potter" franchize, and that minor French film 'Hail Mary". In every case there turned out to be no "there" there. The film makers' worldview most often was pretty much in agreement with the protest groups!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 AM on 10/01/2008
- NickJones I'm a Fan of NickJones 2 fans permalink

And let us not forget "Monty Python's The Life of Brian". ;)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 10/01/2008
- natx I'm a Fan of natx 3 fans permalink

this is pretty ridiculous. the whole point of the book is what happens when people go blind suddenly - on a mass scale. it's less a movie about blindness and more of a movie about how people deal with crises.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 10/01/2008

I think it would be much easier to understand why this group is so upset if you would exchange blindness for, say, suddenly turning into a black person, and then because you become black you lose all human dignity, capacity, morality and civility. Everyone would understand, metaphor or no, that such a depiction of being black is horridly offensive and wrong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:07 AM on 10/01/2008
- pizzmoe I'm a Fan of pizzmoe 20 fans permalink

I'm all for protests, but I think people need to read the book before they protest. My hunch is that the people protesting have no clue what the book is about or how it was written.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:51 AM on 10/01/2008

Wow, talk about failed analogies. That was pretty lame GoodbyeBlueMonday.

In fact there was a movie about someone waking up black one day. It is called Finian's Rainbow, and it too was attacked for showing how a white person turning black did not change that individual but changed how people treated him.

I am surprised the NFB is not using this movie as an opportunity to highlight the difficulties blind people face in our society. This movie illustrates how the suddenly-blind folks are quarantined and forgotten about by the sighted folks. The analogy seems to be the abusive treatment of blind people in our culture, which would be a good teaching tool and conversation starter for the NFB.

Too bad they cannot seem to handle such a mature response to a very interesting story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 10/01/2008
- BlackJAC I'm a Fan of BlackJAC 61 fans permalink

People are aware that patronage of a movie or TV show or book is 100% voluntary, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:04 AM on 10/01/2008
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Fortunate that they had 'three sighted employees". I've not seen a Braille movie screen yet.

And... the entire rest of the organization must rely upon the impressions of the three sighted employees. What did they see? What did they report? And was it accurate?

Cheers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:54 AM on 10/01/2008
- Yani I'm a Fan of Yani permalink

Was that a serious question? I'm actually asking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:52 PM on 10/03/2008
- Jinxykb I'm a Fan of Jinxykb 14 fans permalink
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Oh yuck. I'd like to recommend a nice romantic comedy called 'Ghost Town'. This movie sounds depressing in an already very depressing time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 AM on 10/01/2008
- BlackJAC I'm a Fan of BlackJAC 61 fans permalink

I'm favoring HOW TO LOSE FRIENDS AND ALIENATE PEOPLE, myself. What could be better than a blundering British journalist ordering a strippergram to the office on Take Your Daughter To Work Day?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 AM on 10/01/2008
- devadasi I'm a Fan of devadasi 24 fans permalink

The movie is absurd, as are most American movies, which are based on either fantasy or violence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:26 AM on 10/01/2008
- BlackJAC I'm a Fan of BlackJAC 61 fans permalink

It's what the people want.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 AM on 10/01/2008

It's also based on a book written by a Portuguese writer. . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 10/01/2008

Um, are you familiar with Fellini? He was from Brooklyn, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 10/01/2008

Scurry, what Helen Keller jokes are you referring to? Is it the one about when Helen Keller fell in a well, she screamed her hands off?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 AM on 10/01/2008
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FUNNY!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 AM on 10/01/2008
- piquet I'm a Fan of piquet 14 fans permalink
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You go from seeing to blind in days. Do you honestly think society wouldn't break down if that happened? How can a blind person that has trained themselves to deal with this severe challenge their entire lives and have adapted to it over years compare themselves to the people in this movie?

Everybody needs to BUTCH UP and stop taking "stories" so literally.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:52 AM on 10/01/2008

I think if these blind activists realized that the movie is about people who are just now losing their sight rather than being blind most of their lives and are all of sudden trying to cope with the disorientation that follows, they wouldn't be protesting the movie at all. They need to open their eyes and se.....nev­ermind.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:29 AM on 10/01/2008

More so than the plot, I think it's all the Helen Keller jokes in the movie that they're offended by.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:22 AM on 10/01/2008

i remember a defining moment in my life. I make highend stained glass windows, and was doing a show yrs. ago and a man in his 30's came up and spent about 10 minutes rubbing and touching one of my windows. i couldn't figure out what he was doing, until i realized he was blind, and it was his way of 'seeing' my window. we struck up a conversation, and as i described the window to him, he kept rubbing and touching it. when he finished he said, 'it's beautiful'. whew, i have gotten many many compliments in my life about my work, but everytime i share that story, i feel my eyes well up.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:41 AM on 10/01/2008
- marred I'm a Fan of marred 6 fans permalink

yeah and the ability to SEE doesn't turn people into monsters either but there are plenty of those.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:27 AM on 10/01/2008
- drblack I'm a Fan of drblack 19 fans permalink

This movie is a weak rip off of a part of the Great Sci-Fi Book "Day Of The Triffids".
Skip this movie and go read it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:17 AM on 10/01/2008

Yes, Day of the Triffids is a fantastic book, but it's not what this movie is based on.

This movie is based on the book Blindness by Jose Saramago who won the Nobel prize for literature ten years ago.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 AM on 10/01/2008
- mezz I'm a Fan of mezz permalink
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Blindness! Rape (the Dakota Fanning film) !IT'S FICTION!!!. For crying out loud, are people getting to stupid to understand what entertainment is? It's okay to psychologically abuse people on reality TV, but don't make social commentary in fiction because you might offend someone. This kind of activism makes me sick.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:34 AM on 10/01/2008
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