Los Angeles, Dec
26 : Pick a social cause and you'll often find a Hollywood celebrity
speaking out. Gay marriage (Brad Pitt), Darfur (George Clooney), the environment
(Robert Redford or Leonardo DiCaprio).
Most of Hollywood's biggest action
movie stars have remained silent, so far, on the divisive issue following last
week's slaying of 20 young children and six adults at a Connecticut school. And
pop culture experts say it's not hard to see why.
"If you are known for
being a star who carries around weaponry and fires it, when something like this
happens, the last thing in the world you want to do is insert yourself ...
unless you say you are never going to star in another action-adventure movie,"
Robert Thompson, professor of popular culture at Syracuse University,
said.
Longtime gun control advocates like actress Susan Sarandon and
"Bowling for Columbine" documentary director Michael Moore were quick to take to
Twitter after the Connecticut massacre, and tens of thousands of Americans have
since signed online petitions urging approval of stricter gun control
laws.
Yet major action heroes Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis, Denzel
Washington, as well as Pitt and Clooney, have had little or nothing public to
say.
That may change, according to a veteran public relations executive
who handles many Hollywood clients.
"I think there will be a very public
display of outrage from prominent people in the entertainment world and people
wanting to do something about guns," said the public relations chief who asked
not to be named because he was not authorized to speak for his
clients.
"I think the stereotypical Hollywood action star not wanting to
touch an issue like this may be dated. There is a lot of talk about people
wanting to express very public outrage. Let's see who joins, and how that
manifests itself," he said.
With Hollywood studios again under scrutiny
for making violent movies, Paramount Pictures canceled the premiere in
Pittsburgh of Tom Cruise's new film "Jack Reacher," in which Cruise plays a
cold-blooded former military sniper.
In New York, the Lincoln Center Film
Society postponed a screening and conversation with Cruise "out of respect for
the families who lost loved ones in Newtown, Connecticut," according to a
statement.
"Jack Reacher," which opens with a sniper picking off and
killing five apparently random targets on a riverfront promenade, is due to open
in U.S. movie theaters.
Cruise has said nothing publicly about the
shootings in Connecticut, and maintained his silence on the subject during an
appearance on "Late Show With David Letterman" to promote the film.
But
"Jack Reacher" director Christopher McQuarrie told entertainment industry
website TheWrap.com that the actor played a key role in the decision to cancel
the red carpet premiere in Pittsburgh - where much of the movie was
shot.
"Tom and I insisted on it. Nobody should be celebrating anything 24
hours after a tragic event like that," McQuarrie told TheWrap.
Letterman,
however, spoke at length about the killings before Cruise joined him on the set,
saying "it's a sad, sad holiday season."
The talk show host also said
that gun laws were not the answer to a "multi-faceted" social ill.
"I'm
not dumb enough to think that this is a problem of guns, because before there
were guns people were killing each other," Letterman said.
He added that
he was mystified by the "need" for semi-automatic weapons like one reportedly
used in the Connecticut massacre. In a lighter vein, he remarked: "I've never
seen a deer worth 30 rounds of ammo and an automatic rifle."
On
television, the Fox broadcast network pulled graphic trailers for its upcoming
serial killer drama "The Following," and replaced episodes of animated shows
"Family Guy" and "American Dad" to avoid what a network source called the airing
of "any potentially sensitive content."
The finale of Emmy-winning drama
"Homeland" - which included a massive car bomb scene - was preceded with a
disclaimer warning that some scenes may be disturbing.
Hollywood is often
irked when movies and videogames are held to blame for the actions of Americans,
some of them with mental health issues, who have run amok with guns in recent
years.
"I think it's always unfair to single out the entertainment
business for scrutiny. There is something deep in the American psyche that is
much deeper than videogames or movie or records," the public relations executive
said.
Despite the 12 people killed and 59 wounded by a gunman at a
Colorado movie screening in July of "The Dark Knight Rises," the Batman movie
went on to make more than $1 billion at the global box office and is the second
most-successful movie in the United States and Canada for 2012.
Thompson
at Syracuse University questioned how much influence celebrities wield when
expressing their personal opinions - whatever the cause - and especially on an
issue like gun control that raises such passion in the United States on both
sides of the argument.
"It is much more likely that that kind of speaking
out gets people to change their opinion about a celebrity, not an issue,"
Thompson said
Besides, he said, who really cares what random stars think
about events as emotive as the Connecticut killings?
"Celebrities
weighing in after something like this is perceived by a lot of people as tacky.
The idea of expecting (their) opinion to somehow make anything better or
different is, I think, perceived by a lot of people as self-centered hubris,"
Thompson said.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Hollywood quiet so far on gun control after Connecticut
Hollywood quiet so far on gun control after Connecticut
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