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Turkey Blackmails Mel Gibson Who Was Offered Role In Film About Arme

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  • Turkey Blackmails Mel Gibson Who Was Offered Role In Film About Arme

    TURKEY BLACKMAILS MEL GIBSON WHO WAS OFFERED ROLE IN FILM ABOUT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    27.11.2007 14:54 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Foundation for the Struggle Against Baseless
    Allegations of Genocide (ASIMED) has begun an e-mail campaign to
    dissuade actor Mel Gibson from playing a role in a film about the
    Armenian Genocide during World War I.

    The president of ASIMED and faculty member at Ataturk University's
    history department, Professor Savas Egilmez, said that the Armenian
    Diaspora had assigned $100 million to Hollywood film production
    companies to encourage shooting of such a film. "Some Hollywood
    companies are preparing to shoot a film supporting the Armenian
    view. There is hearsay that Mel Gibson is to play a role in one of
    these films. The film is reported to be shot at Icon Productions,
    the company Gibson is a partner in," said Egilmez.

    Egilmez reminded that a similar situation occurred recently when
    Sylvester Stallone announced his plans to play a role in a new film
    adaptation of the book "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh." "After a campaign
    led by ASIMED in which more than 3,000 e-mails were sent to Stallone,
    the actor declined the role. The European press also expressed concerns
    about the book's accuracy. We have begun sending documents about the
    truth of the situation to Gibson. We started an e-mail campaign to
    urge him to decline the role and to not allow this film to be shot
    at his production company.

    What we are facing is a new slander campaign on the level of the
    Midnight Express. We need to put pressure on this famous actor by
    telling him the truth of the matter," Egilmez said, Zaman reports.

    Midnight Express is a 1978 film, based on Billy Hayes' book of the
    same name adapted into screenplay by Oliver Stone. Hayes was a young
    American student sent to a Turkish prison for trying to smuggle
    hashish out of Turkey. The film won Academy Awards for Best Music,
    Original Score (Giorgio Moroder) and Best Writing, Screenplay Based
    on Material from Another Medium (Stone). It was also nominated for
    Best Actor in a Supporting Role (John Hurt), Best Director, Best Film
    Editing and Best Picture.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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