Hollywood responds to deadly Connecticut school shooting
New York - The Associated Press
This undated publicity image released by The Weinstein Company shows, Christoph Waltz as Schultz, left, and Jamie Foxx as Django in the film, "Django Unchained," directed by Quentin Tarantino. AP photo
Hollywood has responded to the rampage at a Connecticut elementary school by
pulling back on its offerings, and one star says the entertainment industry should take some
responsibility for such violence.
Jamie Foxx, one of the industry's biggest
stars, said Saturday as he promoted Quentin Tarantino's upcoming ultra-violent
spaghetti Western-style film about slavery, "Django Unchained," that actors can't
ignore the fact that movie violence can influence people.
"We cannot turn our back and say that
violence in films or anything that we do doesn't have a sort of influence," Foxx
said in an interview on Saturday. "It does."
In true Tarantino form, buckets of blood
explode from characters as they are shot or shredded to pieces by rabid dogs in
"Django
Unchained."
Despite Friday's mass shooting, the press
junket for the movie, which opens in theaters Christmas Day, continued in New
York as scheduled on Saturday.
Tarantino, whose credits include "Pulp
Fiction" and the "Kill Bill" volumes, said he was tired of defending his films
each time the nation is shocked by gun violence. He said "tragedies happen" and
blame should fall on those guilty of the crimes.
Foxx's co-star Kerry Washington said she believes the
film's explicit brutality serves an important purpose in educating audiences
about the atrocities of slavery.
"I do think that it's important when we
have the opportunity to talk about violence and not just kind of have it as
entertainment, but
connect it to the wrongs, the injustices, the social ills," she said.
In the Newtown, Conn., massacre on Friday,
a gunman killed his mother and then went to an elementary school, where he killed six
adults and 20 children before committing suicide.
In response, premieres for Tom Cruise's new action
movie, "Jack Reacher," in Pittsburgh and the family comedy "Parental Guidance"
in Los Angeles were postponed.
Also, Fox pulled new episodes of "Family
Guy" and "American
Dad" that were to air Sunday to avoid potentially sensitive content. The
originally scheduled episode of "Family Guy" had Peter telling his own version
of the nativity story. The "American Dad" episode told the story of a
demon that punished naughty children at Christmas. Both series plan to
substitute reruns.
Fox also confirmed that a scheduled repeat
of "The Cleveland Show" for Sunday was swapped for another rerun of that series
out of the same concern.