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Hollywood divided over Cotillard’s 9/11
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Tangi
Quemener
LOS ANGELES—Hollywood insiders are scratching their heads over comments
by French Oscar winner Marion Cotillard, with some asking whether her
questioning of the events of September 11 will damage her international
career. “I think we’re lied to about a lot of things,” Cotillard said
during a television program first broadcast last year which has
resurfaced on the Internet. The actress who picked up the award for
playing Edith Piaf in the French film “La vie en rose” cited the attacks
on New York and Washington in 2001 as one example, adding: “I tend to
believe in the conspiracy theory.”
In the video, the 32-year-old Parisian talks about watching films on the
Internet which challenge the official version of the September 11
attacks, saying “it’s fascinating, even addictive”. She continues: “Did
man really walk on the moon? Me, I’ve seen a fair few documentaries on
the subject. That, really, I question. In any case, I don’t believe
everything people tell me, that’s for sure.” Cotillard’s lawyer Vincent
Toledano told AFP she had “never intended to contest nor question the
attacks of September 11, 2001, and regrets the way old remarks have been
taken out of context.”
The comments reverberated in Hollywood. “Only a week after picking up
her best actress Oscar, Marion Cotillard’s unconventional views on the
September 11 terrorist attacks have come to light,” wrote the Hollywood
journal, Variety. “It remains to be seen what effect the revelation of
her beliefs will have on her future in US films,” it said. In its
entertainment supplement, The Envelope, the Los Angeles Times wrote:
“Normally, it takes Oscar winners at least a few months or years to land
in trouble, but Marion Cotillard could set a new record thanks to some
bizarre comments she made last year that are now triggering a hubbub
just days after her best-actress victory.” Prior to snatching the
coveted gold statuette, the French beauty signed up for two other
Hollywood films: police flick “Public Enemies” and a film version of the
musical “Nine”. A spokesman for Universal Studios, distributor of
“Public Enemies”, did not immediately return seeking a reaction, while
Cotillard’s spokesman in Hollywood referred to Toledano’s statement. For
Tom O’Neil, a critic with The Envelope, her comments are not harmless.
Had they come to light earlier, “she probably would have lost the
Oscar,” he said.
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