Freida Pinto: ‘I wouldn’t work with Woody Allen again’

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Freida Pinto: ‘I wouldn’t work with Woody Allen again’
‘Directors couldn’t go past what they saw on the outside’ … Pinto. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian
She became a star in Slumdog Millionaire – before being cast in a string of regrettable roles. Now she’s in a brutal sex-trafficking drama and speaking out about skin lightening and shortsighted directors

by Simon Hattenstone

Sun 27 Jan 2019 17.00 ESTLast modified on Mon 28 Jan 2019 02.22 EST

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2019/jan/27/freida-pinto-i-wouldnt-work-with-woody-allen-again

Freida Pinto’s role in her new film Love Sonia is shocking. She plays a desperate sex worker in a brutal tale of trafficking. Rashmi is complex, edgy and selfish – everything you wouldn’t expect of a Pinto character. After all, the Indian actor, who made her name in Danny Boyle’s phenomenally successful Slumdog Millionaire, has spent much of her career playing eye candy. And she is sick of it.

Love Sonia is relentless. A debt-ridden father sells his teenage daughter Preeti to a landlord, who then trafficks her to a brothel in Mumbai. Her sister Sonia, brilliantly played by newcomer Mrunal Thakur, goes in search of her, and is also ensnared in the trafficking web. She is anally raped to preserve her value as a virgin. Having lost her virginity, she is stitched so she can once again be sold as untouched. Just when you think things can’t get worse, they do.

Pinto’s older sex worker appears to befriend Sonia, but ultimately betrays her to protect herself. This is a world without love or loyalty and reflects a stark reality. Last year, India was named the most dangerous country for women in terms of human trafficking, by a Thomson Reuters Foundation survey of 550 experts on women’s issues.

Love Sonia has been 10 years in the making. Pinto was first shown an early version of the script by director Tabrez Noorani the day after she finished shooting Slumdog Millionaire. Noorani, a line producer on Slumdog Millionaire, wrote Love Sonia after helping to rescue trafficked women from brothels. But it took another decade to finesse the script, get financial backing and find the right Sonia.


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Freida Pinto in Love Sonia. Photograph: Allstar/BIG STUFF
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It has been a strange, decade-long career, including an unexplained extended break. Meanwhile, off-screen she has been an assertive force for good, consistently campaigning for the rights of women. Does she see a contradiction between her feminism and the films she has made? “Completely! There was no way I agreed with so much that I did in my early career.”

Pinto takes me through some of her experiences, with jaw-dropping honesty. She loved working with Brolin on the Allen film (“Josh taught me to relax because I would get really worked up before each take – I was too nervous to breathe and my body would stiffen”), but has nothing positive to say of her part. “I was just the muse, the ingenue.” Would she work again with Allen, who has been accused by his daughter Dylan of sexual assault (an allegation he denies)? “No. Absolutely not. I wouldn’t work with him because I’m in solidarity with women who have come out with their stories, whether they are proven or not. I’m just going to stick to what my gut instinct tells me. I’m 34 years old, I’ve worked for 11 years in this industry, I’m not desperate and I will never be desperate.”


‘The most beautiful girl in the world’ … Pinto in Slumdog Millionaire. Photograph: Imagenet
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Then it is on to another unhappy experience, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, made in 2011. Pinto was looking forward to playing a smart, independent-minded primatologist. But it didn’t work out that way. “I felt completely undermined as the only female perfomer in the film who wasn’t given a task other than to be a primatologist in frickin’ high heels and follow the men around. Have you seen Jane Goodall wearing high heels and running on the Golden Gate Bridge? I don’t think so. I spoke to one of the producers and asked why I was put in high heels because it didn’t make sense for my character – if she was so hands-on with animals, she needed freedom of movement and her body language needed to be different. I wish I’d been more confident in putting my case forward back then, but I remember asking him what his reference was and I was told Megan Fox from Transformers and I was like – that is a completely different film.” Again, she doesn’t write off the experience – she got to work with some of her favourite actors, including Andy Serkis and John Lithgow – but she does write off her role in the film.

Pinto is not finished yet. Now we are on to Black Gold, a historical epic about the scramble for oil in the Arabian desert in the 1920s. “In Black Gold, what was I? Like a princess who had no say, who was just in love … I can’t even remember the story, that’s how bad it is.” And she is really trying hard to remember her character now. “Oh my God! What was my role? I have no frickin clue! Oh my God, that’s terrible.” In 30 years of interviewing, I have never heard somebody trash their career so comprehensively – or honestly.

Pinto is on a brief visit to Britain from Los Angeles, where she now lives, to promote Love Sonia. We meet at the central London hotel where she is staying. She arrives quietly, orders a camomile tea and gets on with it. Pinto is, of course, gorgeous; slightly built, but strong-looking. She is also bright, intense and combative. In her tracksuit top and bottoms and surprisingly large trainers (size eight and a half), she resembles a Hollywood action hero. Her accent is a weird global confection – cut-glass English, Indian, American, with an upward Aussie inflection. She says people tell her she sounds South African.

Pinto was born in Mumbai (then still Bombay) to Mangalorean Catholics – her mother was a school principal, her father a bank manager. She went to convent school and was a confident, outspoken girl. She says she soon felt stymied by the dogma of the church. “I was 13 or 14 when I heard a priest talk about homosexuality in a sermon. He asked us to pray for them through this illness, this sickness, what they’re going through, hoping that they would come out the other side, finding the answer in Jesus. After mass, I questioned him. I said: ‘What makes you think it’s an illness?’”


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Pinto in Miral. Photograph: Publicity image from film company
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Her parents worried that she was too opinionated, and she admits at times she was. “I was very candid; a bit too honest. When I was six or seven years old, there was this young boy, probably about 16, who sang a Christmas carol during Sunday mass, and he was terrible. He came over to wish the family happy Christmas and I said: ‘Hey, you sang terribly at mass today, you shouldn’t sing.’ And my mum was like: ‘Oh my God, I’m so embarrassed, I’m so sorry that my daughter is so rude.’” Would she do that now? “Of course not because I’ve been told not to do it, or I’ll find a better way of putting it, but I was a bit too blunt as a child, and that was terrible. I hurt the poor boy’s feelings.” How did he react? “Apparently he was very upset. My mum told me he never sang again after that.”

She studied English literature, and after graduating in 2005 went into modelling. Two years later, she was cast in Slumdog Millionaire, despite having no acting experience. The film won eight Oscars, including best picture and director. She and her co-star, British actor Dev Patel, were suddenly world famous. Everybody wanted a share of their fairytale – they became a couple in real life, and were together for six years. Pinto found herself in demand across the world – not just as an actor, but also to flog products. In 2009, she signed a lucrative contract to became the face of L’Oréal.

Life really was amazing. “I was riding the waves and going to all the fashion weeks on the front row. And travelling first class, and holidays and blah blah blah. And every director I wanted to meet wanted to meet me too.”

And then they offered her parts. And time after time they disappointed. For the first time in her life, she lost confidence. Did she feel exposed because she hadn’t trained as an actor? “Yes, I felt like people around me knew more how to do things. All I had was instinct. I lost the innocence that comes with confidence. The blind faith. Spontaneity.”

Even the films she was proud of prompted uncomfortable questions – in Michael Winterbottom’s Trishna, based on Tess of the D’urbervilles, she wanted to know why she had to be so passive. When she was cast as the eponymous Palestinian heroine of Miral, she wondered why. “I worried that I wasn’t Arab enough to play the role, so how were they going to convince the audience?” Again, she stresses the positives – Schnabel treated her with respect and she learned about the politics of the Middle East. In Desert Dancer, she was cast as an Iranian, and again asked why. But she knew the answer really. “It’s the same reason Ridley Scott was questioned on why they had non-Egyptian actors playing Egyptian roles in Gods of Egypt. To get the film financed and sold, they came to the person they thought was closest to that culture. Having said that, Iran and India have nothing in common. We’re two different parts of the world.”

Did she ever think of sticking two fingers up at the film industry and walking way? “Yeah, I did. And it cost me two and a half years. I didn’t work for two and a half years.” At 28, she says, she had an existential crisis. “I thought: is this something I really want to do, or am I just doing it because I got this amazing start to my career and now this is all I know how to do?”

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So she waited for a good job to come along. And waited. “I didn’t know if I’d ever get a job again because out of sight could be so out of mind.” Was she offered lots of roles? “Yes, but – trust me – they were not worth my time.” Does she regret turning any of them down? “No. The films were big, but the roles were not good enough to regret.”


Pinto as Jas Mitra in Guerrilla. Photograph: © Sky UK Limited
I ask if she ever struggled for money. “No, no. That was the saving grace. I had a lucrative brand endorsement deal – a seven-year contract that kept me afloat. I’m grateful to L’Oréal for ever.” In 2011, her L’Oréal contract came under scrutiny when it was suggested that the company had lightened her skin in a campaign. Had they Photoshopped the image? L’Oréal denies altering her skin tone but she says: “I’m sure they did, because that’s not the colour of my skin you saw in a few of the campaigns.”

Did she complain? “I said to my agent after the first controversy that I would like to see the pictures before, and I would like to be able to question them on colour correction.” She also insisted on having a clause written into her contract. “All the brands, including L’Oréal, have a skin-lightening range that they sell in India and I made them put it in my contract that I would not touch that with a barge pole. If you don’t put it in your contract before you sign on, they can come and you will be compelled to do it.” After she protested about the skin-lightening, she says, it never happened again. (L’Oréal has been approached for a comment.)

Pinto has lived in Los Angeles for nine years, and says she feels at home there; her boyfriend, adventure photographer Cory Tran, is also LA-based. She often spends time in Mumbai, where her parents and sister still live.

In 2017, she returned to the screen with Guerrilla, a TV drama about Britain’s black power movement. Pinto’s underground activist Jas Mitra was a formidable character, leading from the front. She says this was the start of her reinvention as an actor. At one point Jas says to one of the men in her life: “The first chance you get, you reduce me to my looks.” I tell her it feels personal – that it could be aimed at directors such as Allen or Mallick. “Yep!” she says, with a broad smile. She says that bit of dialogue was the result of a conversation she had with Guerrilla director John Ridley. “I talked to John about looks and how they hold people back and I told him how crazy it is to be a little fed up to be told you’re beautiful. I know I sound ungrateful, but I’m not. I’m very grateful for what I have, but I’m fed up of hearing other people tell me that or remind me of that.”

As for now, Pinto could not be happier that nobody is likely to come out of Love Sonia discussing her looks. On its release in India, the film was not been warmly received. “People haven’t welcomed a film that exposes the underbelly of the country. It hasn’t done well.” But she says she is not going to judge the film’s success by its box-office takings – highlighting the trafficking scandal is far more important.

In many ways, Pinto is just starting out as an actor – and still has much to prove. But despite everything she has said today, she insists there is nothing she would change. If she hadn’t done all the naff work, she says, she wouldn’t be where she is now – and it’s great to have got her existential crisis out of the way. “I’m glad the reality check happened. Now I think I can finally say I’ve figured things out for myself
 
Right...When you wanted him to put you on, your Google was not working...now that you are on the radar, "I would never work with him again..." SMH

you want to REALLY make a difference?

She should donate all her residuals from the Woddy Allen movies she was in

same with any artist that not only PERFORMED with R. Kelly but has a SONG written and/or produced by him

in fact?

same for Cosby...

give BACK all the scholarships and donations.
 
Lol @tallblack being the new leader of the BGOL women haters club

Also lol @ the rkelly doc getting niggas madder than fish grease.
 
If you really want to rep for kelly, let him give your daughter some private music lessons. Preferrably 14-15.
 
Scarlett Johansson on Woody Allen: ‘I Believe Him, and I Would Work With Him Anytime.’
By Zoe Haylock@zoe_alliyah
04-scarlet-johannsen.w330.h330.jpg

Scarlett Johansson Photo: Mondadori Portfolio/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images

Scarlett Johansson came out as a Woody Allen supporter in this week’s issue of The Hollywood Reporter. The actress, who plays the “moral compass” in the upcoming Jojo Rabbitfilm, has previously worked with Allen in Match Point, Scoop, and Vicky Cristina Barcelona and revealed that she’d love to be in another of his films. “How do I feel about Woody Allen?” she asked. “I love Woody. I believe him, and I would work with him anytime.” It’s an unpopular opinion, as other Allen collaborators, like Greta Gerwig, continue to distance themselves from the director. In the past, Johansson has demurred when asked about the controversy surrounding the director,telling The Guardian in 2014 that she was “unaware that there’s been a backlash.” But this time, she pulled no punches. “I see Woody whenever I can, and I have had a lot of conversations with him about it,” she continued. “I have been very direct with him, and he’s very direct with me. He maintains his innocence, and I believe him.”

Throughout the #MeToo movement, Woody Allen has face renewed scrutiny, as sexual-molestation accusations made against him by his adopted daughter Dylan Farrow reemerged. Actors distanced themselves from him and Amazon returned the rights to his latest film, A Rainy Day in New York.The film’s stars Selena Gomez, Timothée Chalamet, and Rebecca Hall donated their salaries. (The film was picked up by Italian distributor Lucky Red and will be shown in theaters across Europe.) As the culture shifts to believing victims, Johansson finds her situation difficult. “It’s hard because it’s a time where people are very fired up, and understandably,” she said. “Things needed to be stirred up, and so people have a lot of passion and a lot of strong feelings and are angry, and rightfully so. It’s an intense time.”
 
Scarlett Johansson on Woody Allen: ‘I Believe Him, and I Would Work With Him Anytime.’
By Zoe Haylock@zoe_alliyah
04-scarlet-johannsen.w330.h330.jpg

Scarlett Johansson Photo: Mondadori Portfolio/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images

Scarlett Johansson came out as a Woody Allen supporter in this week’s issue of The Hollywood Reporter. The actress, who plays the “moral compass” in the upcoming Jojo Rabbitfilm, has previously worked with Allen in Match Point, Scoop, and Vicky Cristina Barcelona and revealed that she’d love to be in another of his films. “How do I feel about Woody Allen?” she asked. “I love Woody. I believe him, and I would work with him anytime.” It’s an unpopular opinion, as other Allen collaborators, like Greta Gerwig, continue to distance themselves from the director. In the past, Johansson has demurred when asked about the controversy surrounding the director,telling The Guardian in 2014 that she was “unaware that there’s been a backlash.” But this time, she pulled no punches. “I see Woody whenever I can, and I have had a lot of conversations with him about it,” she continued. “I have been very direct with him, and he’s very direct with me. He maintains his innocence, and I believe him.”

Throughout the #MeToo movement, Woody Allen has face renewed scrutiny, as sexual-molestation accusations made against him by his adopted daughter Dylan Farrow reemerged. Actors distanced themselves from him and Amazon returned the rights to his latest film, A Rainy Day in New York.The film’s stars Selena Gomez, Timothée Chalamet, and Rebecca Hall donated their salaries. (The film was picked up by Italian distributor Lucky Red and will be shown in theaters across Europe.) As the culture shifts to believing victims, Johansson finds her situation difficult. “It’s hard because it’s a time where people are very fired up, and understandably,” she said. “Things needed to be stirred up, and so people have a lot of passion and a lot of strong feelings and are angry, and rightfully so. It’s an intense time.”

Of course,this bitch would have no problem with a guy marrying and fucking step-daughter.....verrrrry normal...:smh::hmm:
 
Scarlett Johansson on Woody Allen: ‘I Believe Him, and I Would Work With Him Anytime.’
By Zoe Haylock@zoe_alliyah
04-scarlet-johannsen.w330.h330.jpg

Scarlett Johansson Photo: Mondadori Portfolio/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images

Scarlett Johansson came out as a Woody Allen supporter in this week’s issue of The Hollywood Reporter. The actress, who plays the “moral compass” in the upcoming Jojo Rabbitfilm, has previously worked with Allen in Match Point, Scoop, and Vicky Cristina Barcelona and revealed that she’d love to be in another of his films. “How do I feel about Woody Allen?” she asked. “I love Woody. I believe him, and I would work with him anytime.” It’s an unpopular opinion, as other Allen collaborators, like Greta Gerwig, continue to distance themselves from the director. In the past, Johansson has demurred when asked about the controversy surrounding the director,telling The Guardian in 2014 that she was “unaware that there’s been a backlash.” But this time, she pulled no punches. “I see Woody whenever I can, and I have had a lot of conversations with him about it,” she continued. “I have been very direct with him, and he’s very direct with me. He maintains his innocence, and I believe him.”

Throughout the #MeToo movement, Woody Allen has face renewed scrutiny, as sexual-molestation accusations made against him by his adopted daughter Dylan Farrow reemerged. Actors distanced themselves from him and Amazon returned the rights to his latest film, A Rainy Day in New York.The film’s stars Selena Gomez, Timothée Chalamet, and Rebecca Hall donated their salaries. (The film was picked up by Italian distributor Lucky Red and will be shown in theaters across Europe.) As the culture shifts to believing victims, Johansson finds her situation difficult. “It’s hard because it’s a time where people are very fired up, and understandably,” she said. “Things needed to be stirred up, and so people have a lot of passion and a lot of strong feelings and are angry, and rightfully so. It’s an intense time.”

Where’s that nigga Harv to play with some pussies when you need him?
 
Dylan Farrow Responds to Scarlett Johansson’s Defense of Woody Allen
By Madeleine Aggeler@mmaggeler
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Dylan Farrow and Scarlett Johansson. Photo: Getty Images

Dylan Farrow — the former stepdaughter of Woody Allen, who has accused the director of sexually abusing her when she was a small child — responded on Wednesday night to Scarlett Johansson’s recent defense of Allen, writing on Twitter, “Scarlett has a long way to go in understanding the issue she claims to champion.”

In a profile published this week, Johansson told The Hollywood Reporter that, despite Farrow’s allegations against him, she “loves” Woody Allen, she believes his denials of the accusations, and she “would work with him anytime.”

“I see Woody whenever I can, and I have had a lot of conversations with him about it,” Johansson went on. “I have been very direct with him, and he’s very direct with me. He maintains his innocence, and I believe him.”

In response to a Los Angeles Times tweet about Johansson’s comments, Farrow made oblique reference to the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements of which Johansson has been a vocal supporter, writing, “Because if we’ve learned anything from the past two years it’s that you definitely should believe male predators who ‘maintain their innocence’ without question.”



She added, “And my apologies in advance for disrupting her google alerts again.”

In the wake of the #MeToo movement, and the increased scrutiny it brought to the allegations against powerful men like Allen, many stars have tried, unlike Johansson, to distance themselves from the director. Greta Gerwig, Colin Firth, Kate Winslet, and Timothée Chalamet have indicated they would not work with the accused molester again.
 
She lost me here... "I’m in solidarity with women who have come out with their stories, whether they are proven or not."
 
Everything We Learned From Woody Allen’s Controversial Memoir
By Hunter Harris@hunteryharris
Woody Allen Photo: Unanue Europa Press/Europa Press via Getty Images
In his new memoir, Apropos of Nothing, Woody Allen recounts his relationship with ex-partner Mia Farrow, his affair with Farrow’s adopted daughter Soon-Yi Previn, and his own adopted daughter Dylan Farrow’s molestation accusation against him. “I knew Mia was fond of telling people I had molested her underage daughter when in fact Soon-Yi was twenty-two, and of course our love, which has resulted in a marriage of over twenty years, was hardly molestation,” he writes of Mia Farrow’s anger upon learning of the affair with her adopted daughter. Much of the book’s argument is what Allen has said for decades: His relationship with Mia allowed him to live as a bachelor across town, he was uninterested in her adopted children until he struck up a friendship with college-aged Soon-Yi, and that Dylan’s accusation is the result of her mother’s influence and rage. “There are still loonies who think I married my daughter, who think Soon-Yi was my child, who think Mia was my wife, who think I adopted Soon-Yi, who think that Obama wasn’t American. But there was never any trial. I was never charged with anything, as it was clear to the investigators nothing had ever occurred.” Here is everything Allen says about the discovery of his affair with Soon-Yi and the molestation allegation.
His relationship with Soon-Yi developed during the filming of Husbands and Wives.
Mia Farrow starred in 12 of Woody Allen’s films. Husbands and Wives (1992), about a pair of married couples whose relationships weather separate infidelities, was their final collaboration. (Allen also counts the movie as one of his best.) Allen says Farrow discovered his relationship with Soon-Yi toward the end of the movie’s production, which made filming the last week of shooting particularly tense.

While I was filming the movie Husbands and Wives, Soon- Yi and I started an affair. An affair that began the next time she came in from college. Passionate from that day on, it has resulted now in many happy years and a wonderful family. Who would have predicted? I only knew she was not the nonentity her mother had dismissed and written off. How wrong Mia was. Here was a sharp, classy, fabulous young woman; highly intelligent, full of latent potential, and ready to ripen superbly if only someone would show her a little interest, a little support, and, most important, some love. We spent a few afternoons walking and talking, delighting in each other’s company and, of course, going to bed.
Allen says Mia Farrow made-up the molestation accusation to get back at him for his affair with Soon-Yi.
Farrow was vicious after she discovered nude photos of Soon-Yi in Allen’s apartment, Allen says. She was shocked by the affair, even though he claims their relationship had peaked many years earlier. (More than once, and for no apparent reason, Allen reports that Farrow had a crush on director Mike Nichols.) In her rage, she threatened to ruin Allen’s life more than once. On a scheduled visit to Connecticut to see their kids, he says she found an opportunity.
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What had happened was that during my visit, while Mia had gone shopping, after explaining to everyone that I had to be watched carefully, all the kids and the babysitters were in the den watching TV, a room full of people. There were no seats for me, so I sat on the floor and might have leaned my head back on the sofa on Dylan’s lap for a moment. I certainly didn’t do anything improper to her. I was in a room full of people watching TV midafternoon. Alison, the nervous babysitter for Mia’s friend’s children — prompted by Mia to be hypervigilant — reported to her employer, Casey, that at one point I had my head on Dylan’s lap. Even if so, it was utterly harmless and totally appropriate. No one said I molested Dylan, but when Casey phoned Mia the following day and said her babysitter reported my head was on Dylan’s lap, Mia ran to Dylan. According to Monica, the nanny, she said, “I’ve got him.” The head on the lap would over time somehow metamorphosize into my molesting her in the attic, but that reenactment of Dory Previn’s song scenario would come later.
Allen maintains his innocence.
Allen completely denies Dylan Farrow’s telling of events that afternoon in Connecticut. Instead, he says, Mia manipulated his daughter into claiming he molested her and coached her through her testimony after rehearsing it on tape.
I never laid a finger on Dylan, never did anything to her that could be even misconstrued as abusing her; it was a total fabrication from start to finish, every subatomic particle of it, no different from I’m the Goglia character. The sheer illogic seemed to me dispositive. I mean, it makes no sense why a fifty-seven-year-old man who has never been accused of a single impropriety in his life, while in the midst of a contentious and very public custody fight, drives up to the hostile environment of the country home belonging to the woman who hates him most, and in a house full of people sympathetic to her, this man, who is thrilled as he has just recently found the serious love of his life, a woman he’d go on to marry and have a family with, would suddenly choose that time and place to become a child molester and abuse his seven-year-old daughter whom he loved. It defied simple common sense. Especially since I had been alone with Dylan many times in my apartment over the years, and if I were actually a fiend, I had ample opportunities to act like one. Yet it makes perfect sense for the angry woman who had announced she would take away my daughter and had a plan worse than death for me, to resort to the single most common cliché of custody warfare, accusing the spouse of abusing the child.
Allen says he “would welcome Dylan with open arms.”
Though Allen denies her molestation accusation, he is dismayed by the strain on his relationship with his daughter, which he says is the result of Mia Farrow’s manipulation.
One of the saddest things of my life was that I was deprived of the years of raising Dylan and could only dream about showing her Manhattan and the joys of Paris and Rome. To this day, Soon-Yi and I would welcome Dylan with open arms if she’d ever want to reach out to us as Moses did, but so far that’s still only a dream.
Dylan Farrow accused Allen of molesting her in a New York Times open letter in 2014. In 2018, amid Hollywood’s Me Too reckoning after revelations about Harvey Weinstein, she recounted the allegations on CBS This Morning: “He instructed me to lay down on my stomach and play with my brother’s toy train that was set up,” Farrow said. “He sat behind me in the doorway, and as I played with the toy train, I was sexually assaulted … As a 7-year-old I would say, I would have said he touched my private parts.”
 
Kate Winslet Now ‘Regrets’ Working With Woody Allen and Roman Polanski
By Justin Curto@justinmcurto
Photo: Trisha Leeper/FilmMagic

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Kate Winslet has many fucks left to give — 19, exactly, in a new Vanity Fair interview — and she’s devoted three of them to questioning her own past collaborations with alleged sexual abuser Woody Allen and convicted rapist Roman Polanski. “It’s like, what the fuck was I doing working with Woody Allen and Roman Polanski?” she asked. “It’s unbelievable to me now how those men were held in such high regard, so widely in the film industry and for as long as they were. It’s fucking disgraceful.” Winslet starred in Polanski’s movie Carnage in 2011 and Allen’s Wonder Wheel in 2017. In 2018, she alluded to “regrets” about working with people whom she wouldn’t name at the time. Her new comments came as part of a conversation about her role in the Me Too movement. “I have to take responsibility for the fact that I worked with them both,” Winslet said. “I can’t turn back the clock. I’m grappling with those regrets but what do we have if we aren’t able to just be fucking truthful about all of it?”
Winslet also discussed taking her role in Ammonite, the upcoming period romance with Saoirse Ronan. “Ammonite has made me really aware of being even more committed to honoring what women want to be saying for themselves in films and how we really want to be portrayed, regardless of sexual orientation,” Winslet said. “Because life is fucking short and I’d like to do my best when it comes to setting a decent example to younger women. We’re handing them a pretty fucked up world, so I’d like to do my bit in having some proper integrity.”
 
“Sex Trafficking” is the new ‘cause’ to forget generational abuse to American Black folk.
 
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