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- <text id=91TT1035>
- <title>
- May 13, 1991: Censors On The Street
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 13, 1991 Crack Kids
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 70
- Censors on the Street
- </hdr><body>
- <p> Inside San Francisco's venerable Tosca Cafe, filming for the
- mystery thriller Basic Instinct, starring Michael Douglas, was
- proceeding smoothly. But on the street a drama of another sort
- was unfolding: a crowd of gay activists carried signs, shouted
- slogans and continued their efforts to disrupt the action. The
- number of arrests mounted last week as they violated a
- temporary restraining order to stay 100 ft. away. In what
- moviemakers see as a dangerous form of politically correct
- censorship, the protesters are demanding that the script be
- changed because it depicts lesbians as murderers and contains
- a scene in which they claim a woman is date-raped.
- </p>
- <p> The story was done by Hollywood's megahot scriptwriter Joe
- Eszterhas (Jagged Edge), who was paid a record $3 million for
- his work. It casts Douglas as a cop with a reckless past who
- falls in love with a bisexual novelist, one of three women
- suspected of the ice-pick killing of an aging rock star. Each
- of the women, a lesbian, a bisexual and a heterosexual, has a
- motive for the crime.
- </p>
- <p> Shortly after shooting began, representatives of the Queer
- Nation and other gay groups met with Eszterhas, director Paul
- Verhoeven (Robocop) and producer Alan Marshall. They asked for
- script revisions and proposed that Douglas' cop character be
- played by a woman. Basic Instinct, they charged, is a "clearly
- homophobic, lesbophobic film that once again inverts the
- realities of our lives." Eszterhas, sympathetic, proposed some
- revisions, which he said would have resulted in "a more socially
- responsible and creative movie."
- </p>
- <p> But the director and producer demurred, saying the changes
- would "undermine the strength of the original material, weaken
- the characters and lessen the integrity of the picture itself."
- Executives at Carolco and Tri-Star Pictures likewise took a
- strong stand against what could be a Hollywood nightmare: the
- vetting of entertainment by special-interest groups.
- "Censorship by street action will not be tolerated," they said.
- Queer Nation members replied that they are tired of Hollywood's
- "censorship" of their lives. Said one gay leader: "Hollywood has
- once again decided to sacrifice the lives of gay men and
- lesbians in order to make money." A previously scheduled
- fund-raising lunch with Douglas on the Basic Instinct set for
- an AIDS organization is not expected to quell the controversy.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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