Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
Lemme say this tho..why is Mia such a huge advocate and friend of Roman Polanski?
justdrew » 03 Feb 2014 04:53 wrote:technically Sun Yi was adopted by a husband of farrow, previn. I don't think allen ever adopted her as a daughter, though it's certainly possible. marrying her mother doesn't legally in and of itself make her his daughter.
Sounder » 03 Feb 2014 08:20 wrote:8 bit wrote...Lemme say this tho..why is Mia such a huge advocate and friend of Roman Polanski?
You or I are no different than Mia in our being abused, wanting to expose that abuse, and yet still living with the conditioning, denial, involvement with, and a sly ‘knowing’ that abuse can develop ones need and then ability to act.
Too fuckin many excellent actors is a natural result of a culture of coercion and deceit.
Enjoy your cake.
Can we stop excusing Farrow for her incomprehensible hypocrisy (unless she's a total phony, in which case it's quite comprehensible)?
smiths » Sun Feb 02, 2014 8:11 pm wrote:Wood Allen guilty? how the hell would I know, but that piece posted above is pure shit
"until it is proven otherwise, beyond a reasonable doubt, it’s important to extend the presumption of innocence to Dylan Farrow ...
The damnably difficult thing about all of this, of course, is that you can’t presume that both are innocent at the same time ...
To be blunt: I think Woody Allen probably did it, though, of course, I could be wrong.
But it’s okay if I’m wrong.
For two reasons ...
First, because my opinion is not attached to a juridical apparatus ...
The second reason it’s okay if I’m wrong is that I’m probably not wrong."
it is a series of stupid, illogical and contradictory statements masquerading as intelligent analysis
there are 2, maybe 3 or 4 people in the world who know the truth, all the rest should shut up
. in the absence of a court case we can either presume the innocence of WA--not guilty of child rape---or we can presume the innocence of Dylan---not guilty of lying about her rape.
p.s. The reflexive groupthink on display here is unsettling.
Is there NO chance that Allen is being victimized by a false accusation?
FourthBase » Mon Feb 03, 2014 8:11 am wrote:. in the absence of a court case we can either presume the innocence of WA--not guilty of child rape---or we can presume the innocence of Dylan---not guilty of lying about her rape.
Or, in this case, we can presume nothing and examine all the possibilities? This is an exceptional conflict of narratives, isn't it? Or are we to treat it like a just a Very Special opportunity to pledge allegiance to Victims as a category, regardless of details and possibilities? (Possibilities that we here might otherwise contemplate freely, were it not for the case becoming a kind of "Who's Side Are You On? Victims or Abusers?" test.)
sunny » 03 Feb 2014 09:20 wrote:FourthBase » Mon Feb 03, 2014 8:11 am wrote:. in the absence of a court case we can either presume the innocence of WA--not guilty of child rape---or we can presume the innocence of Dylan---not guilty of lying about her rape.
Or, in this case, we can presume nothing and examine all the possibilities? This is an exceptional conflict of narratives, isn't it? Or are we to treat it like a just a Very Special opportunity to pledge allegiance to Victims as a category, regardless of details and possibilities? (Possibilities that we here might otherwise contemplate freely, were it not for the case becoming a kind of "Who's Side Are You On? Victims or Abusers?" test.)
In the absence of a court case it's really not possible to examine all of the possibilities in detail because we lack access to or knowledge of the evidence that would be presented in court. But it's a fundamental fact of this controversy: only one of them can be lying. In light of our culture of rape I feel the preponderance of doubt to a moral certainty belongs to Dylan. I choose to presume the innocence of Dylan. If you wish to remain neutral that's your business.
BrandonD » 03 Feb 2014 04:29 wrote:There seems a huge lack of objectivity in this subject.
We're talking about someone who adopted a girl many decades younger than him, and then later married her. This means he had someone in his house that at some point he perceived as his *daughter*, and yet at a later point he was able to have sex with this person.
This fact is already dangerously close to pedo-town, how can anyone disregard these allegations with any sense of confidence?
This really seems a classic case of people being unable to separate art from the artist, and therefore they feel irrationally compelled to grasp for any story that holds together their current picture of the world.
First, the Soon-Yi situation:
Every time I stumble upon this topic on the internet, it seems the people who are most outraged are also the most ignorant of the facts. Following are the top ten misconceptions, followed by my response in italics:
#1: Soon-Yi was Woody’s daughter. False.
#2: Soon-Yi was Woody’s step-daughter. False.
#3: Soon-Yi was Woody and Mia’s adopted daughter. False. Soon-Yi was the adopted daughter of Mia Farrow and André Previn. Her full name was Soon-Yi Farrow Previn.
#4: Woody and Mia were married. False.
#5: Woody and Mia lived together. False. Woody lived in his apartment on Fifth Ave. Mia and her kids lived on Central Park West. In fact, Woody never once stayed over night at Mia’s apartment in 12 years.
#6: Woody and Mia had a common-law marriage. False. New York State does not recognize common law marriage. Even in states that do, a couple has to cohabitate for a certain number of years.
#7: Soon-Yi viewed Woody as a father figure. False. Soon-Yi saw Woody as her mother’s boyfriend. Her father figure was her adoptive father, André Previn.
#8: Soon-Yi was underage when she and Woody started having relations. False. She was either 19 or 21. (Her year of birth in Korea was undocumented, but believed to be either 1970 or ’72.)
#9: Soon-Yi was borderline retarded. Ha! She’s smart as a whip, has a degree from Columbia University and speaks more languages than you.
#10: Woody was grooming Soon-Yi from an early age to be his child bride. Oh, come on! According to court documents and Mia’s own memoir, until 1990 (when Soon-Yi was 18 or 20), Woody “had little to do with any of the Previn children, (but) had the least to do with Soon-Yi” so Mia encouraged him to spend more time with her. Woody started taking her to basketball games, and the rest is tabloid history. So he hardly “had his eye on her” from the time she was a child.
Let me add this: If anyone is creeped out by the notion of a 55-year old man becoming involved with his girlfriend’s 19-year old adopted daughter, I understand. That makes perfect sense. But why not get the facts straight? If the actual facts are so repugnant to you, then why embellish them?
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/02/03/the-kangaroo-court-of-twitter-is-no-place-to-judge-woody-allen/
First off , I don’t know if Woody Allen abused his adopted daughter Dylan Farrow and nor do you. I only know what I am inclined to believe and what the reasons are. Those reasons are, in fact, opinions. Some are to do with this particular case, some with the way that victims of abuse are routinely dismissed, some with the way Hollywood operates. Some are to do with the films he makes – the texts themselves – and some with the context: the context in which so many perpetrators walk free. That context is changing.
When the custody battle between Farrow and Allen took place in 1992, social media was not around. Right now online, especially on Twitter, many people are absolutely certain that Allen is guilty. Just as they are absolutely certain that Amanda Knox is guilty, just as they will be absolutely certain that what I am saying here is wrong. There is not a lot of nuance in Hashtag Justice. There is a hashtag #IBelieveDylanFarrow.
This is destroying Allen’s reputation as much as the explosive custody case did at the time. It is worth reiterating that the judge, Elliott Wilk, found the evidence of abuse against the seven-year-old Dylan “inconclusive” and doubted that Allen could ever acquire “the insight and judgment necessary for him to relate to Dylan appropriately”. He damned his parenting his skills, saying he did not qualify as “an adequate custodian for Moses, Dylan or Satchel”. He also talked about the way he isolated Soon-Yi Previn from the rest of her family, leaving her with “no visible support system”.
Was this part of the grooming he used to cover up abuse of Dylan? I don’t know, but clearly for most people he crossed over a boundary with his relationship with Soon-Yi.
Such boundary crossing is, as we know, not uncommon for the rich and powerful and nor is Hollywood Babylon the only institution to shrug it off. The Golden Globes award Allen was recently given for lifetime achievement seems to have activated the Farrow family. Dylan’s open letter is harrowing, and given more power coming via the writer Nicholas Kristof, who is not only a friend of the family but also a brilliant campaigner for the rights of women and girls. We know that it takes immense bravery to speak out. We know that false allegations do happen, but rarely. We know that the reality of child abuse is that we continue to ignore the victims.
In Britain, a weird kind of post-Savile displacement occurred where the victims were again “disappeared”. Discussion moved on to the institutions that had housed this abuse – all of them – and then focused on the management of the BBC. Right now there are ongoing trials of old men charged with rape and abuse. These are necessary, however uncomfortable. For the alternative is what we are seeing online: kangaroo courts where people not in possession of many facts are not doing the real victims any favours. Someone tweets “#IBelieveDylanFarrow because it wouldn’t be the first time a film-maker guy rapes little girls”. No it wouldn’t. I assume this is a reference to Roman Polanski.
Polanski, it is important to note, was arrested, charged, made a plea bargain and fled the US when it look like he might be imprisoned. The man is a genius, which is why I wanted to interview him some 20 years ago. Since then, attitudes have changed – and I have changed my attitude, too. I now think I should not have given him publicity. I now think I got it wrong. But with Polanski there is no doubt of his guilt.
With Allen there is doubt and probably always will be. His detractors use his films as evidence; his fans refuse to give them up. Actually, the great Joan Didion’s takedown of his characters all living in self-absorbed, privileged adolescence still hits home. The old questions are asked again, though we already know the answer: can great art be made by the immoral or the amoral? Of course, history provides the evidence again and again.
As I said, I am inclined to stand alongside Dylan’s howl of pain but it is untenable to think that any justice is served for victims by tweeting opinion as fact. Due process, the law, is slow and complicated, but we are waking up gradually to the fact that we must listen to the voices of victims. But justice is key here. Because so many victims have been ill-served by the system for so long, there is a void into which rush the certainties of online mobs.
It is easier to see that Hollywood has been complicit in child abuse than to address the shaming and blaming of victims closer to home. Indeed, home is exactly where most children are abused. And where we really don’t want to look. If Dylan Farrow’s letter helps other people speak up and get justice, she has done something heroic.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 178 guests