Gone Baby Gone Canned in U.K. Because of Child Kidnap
Uncomfortably close to real-life headlines.
Dennis Lehane fans in the U.K. will have to wait a little longer to see Gone Baby Gone.
Variety reports that Buena Vista International U.K., the film's British distributor, has "suspended the release indefinitely" due to "the story's similarities to the case of missing British girl Madeleine McCann, who disappeared from her Portuguese holiday apartment in early May."
Madeleine McCann's disappearance hasn't dominated American headlines, but recent developments -- specifically, the naming of her parents as official suspects in the case -- have increased public awareness. Director Ben Affleck, speaking at the Deauville Film Festival, was quoted as saying:
"We are acutely aware of the situation. We have a greater concern for that than the release of our film, which is just a commercial matter, whereas this is a matter of life and death. I'm not up to date on the details, and it is not something that has taken off in the United States in the way it has in the U.K....It is only when someone said there was this case that was very similar to my film that we looked it up. We don't want to release the movie if it is going to touch a nerve or inflame anybody's sensitivities."
Gone Baby Gone is still scheduled for an October 19 release in the United States.
Source: Variety
Variety reports that Buena Vista International U.K., the film's British distributor, has "suspended the release indefinitely" due to "the story's similarities to the case of missing British girl Madeleine McCann, who disappeared from her Portuguese holiday apartment in early May."
Madeleine McCann's disappearance hasn't dominated American headlines, but recent developments -- specifically, the naming of her parents as official suspects in the case -- have increased public awareness. Director Ben Affleck, speaking at the Deauville Film Festival, was quoted as saying:
"We are acutely aware of the situation. We have a greater concern for that than the release of our film, which is just a commercial matter, whereas this is a matter of life and death. I'm not up to date on the details, and it is not something that has taken off in the United States in the way it has in the U.K....It is only when someone said there was this case that was very similar to my film that we looked it up. We don't want to release the movie if it is going to touch a nerve or inflame anybody's sensitivities."
Gone Baby Gone is still scheduled for an October 19 release in the United States.
Source: Variety
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arendr writes: on Sep 14 2007 03:55 PM I keep hearing about that news story over there in Britain. I hate to be jaded, but it's like this is the first time something like that has happened over there. We're so used to those stories in the States that it doesn't really affect me much. Sure it's horrible, but lots of kids go missing daily. Why does the media always choose one particular story to cover? (Reply to this) |
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Jen Yamato writes: on Sep 14 2007 06:46 PM I agree. Child abduction is always tragic, media frenzy or no. That said, it's a shame that Affleck's directorial debut won't be seen by so many UK viewers, especially since you'd think a movie about missing children would only increase awareness of missing children. (Reply to this) |
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h-town24 writes: on Sep 14 2007 07:36 PM "I hate to be jaded, but it's like this is the first time something like that has happened over there." Are you fricking serious? Yeah, that never happens in the U.K.! (Reply to this) |
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arendr writes: on Sep 14 2007 08:04 PM In reply to this comment (#1124216) Hmm...I think maybe you missed the point of my post. Jen got it! (Reply to this) |
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CaptMal writes: on Sep 15 2007 05:21 AM I agree that child abduction is awful (I don't think anyone except maybe perpetrators of such crimes wouldn't), but pulling the movie seems like the wrong thing to do, at least for me. (Reply to this) |
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TheAncientEnemy writes: on Sep 15 2007 08:02 AM Remember when that girl from the US went missing in Jamaica or something? You would think that no one on the planet ever lost a child by the media response. Everything gets sensationalized. A few months back there were four young girls who had just graduated and were killed in a car accident. Every local news station and paper was blabbing about how tragic it was for more than a month, each one having their own montage of family photos accompanied by sappy piano music. They were apparently the first teenagers to ever drive in an irresponsible manner and end their lives as a result. People were crazy. There was talk of renaming a section of the road after the girls (a road that countless accidents have occured on). Tragic? For the families, yes. The biggest story of the year? Apparently every mother vicariously living through their televisions thought so, but I disagreed. That being said, Affleck has the final say here, and I applaud him for making the decision with his heart instead of his already inflated bank account. Personally, I don't agree with it since he would probably be offending maybe 20 people (the girl's family) out of the entire population of Britain, but it's his choice. (Reply to this) |
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