Moore Film Title Angers Author Bradbury
June 19, 2004 12:17 AM EDT
LOS ANGELES - Ray Bradbury is demanding an apology from filmmaker Michael
Moore for lifting the title from his classic science-fiction novel
"Fahrenheit 451" without permission and wants the new documentary
"Fahrenheit 9/11" to be renamed.
"He didn't ask my permission," Bradbury, 83, told The Associated Press on
Friday. "That's not his novel, that's not his title, so he shouldn't have
done it."
The 1953 novel, widely considered Bradbury's masterpiece, ****trays an ugly
futuristic society in which firemen burn homes and libraries in order to
destroy the books inside and keep people from thinking independently.
"Fahrenheit 451" takes its title from the temperature at which books burn.
Moore has called "Fahrenheit 9/11" the "temperature at which freedom
burns."
His film, which won top honors in May at the Cannes Film Festival, charges
that the Bush administration acted ineptly before the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, then played on the public's fear of future terrorism to gain
sup****t for the war against Iraq. It opens nationwide next Friday.
Bradbury, who hadn't seen the movie, said he called Moore's company six
months ago to protest and was promised Moore would call back.
He finally got that call last Saturday, Bradbury said, adding Moore told
him
he was "embarrassed."
"He suddenly realized he's let too much time go by," the author said by
phone from his home in Los Angeles' Cheviot Hills section.
Joanne Doroshow, a spokeswoman for "Fahrenheit 9/11," said the film's
makers
have "the utmost respect for Ray Bradbury."
"Mr. Bradbury's work has been an inspiration to all of us involved in this
film, but when you watch this film you will see the fact that the title
reflects the facts that the movie explores, the very real life events
before, around and after 9-11," she said.
Bradbury, who is a registered political independent, said he would rather
avoid litigation and is "hoping to settle this as two gentlemen, if he'll
shake hands with me and give me back my book and title."
Moore's film needed new distributors after Disney refused to let its
Miramax
subsidiary release it, claiming it was too politically charged. The
documentary was later bought by Miramax bosses Harvey and Bob Weinstein,
who
lined up Lions Gate and IFC Films to help distribute it.
The movie's distributors are appealing to lower its R rating to PG-13 and
a
screening has been set for Tuesday by the Motion Picture Association of
America's appeals board.
Bradbury's book was made into a 1966 movie directed by Francois Truffaut.
A
new edition of the book is scheduled for release in eight weeks, Bradbury
said, and plans are in the works for a new film version, to be directed by
Frank Darabont.
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Let the name calling begin!!! (its all you libs have)


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