New York TIMES / July 26, 2010

Oliver Stone Controversy

By BROOKS BARNES; Compiled by DAVE ITZKOFF

Oliver Stone found himself the catalyst of an online brush fire on
Monday after he made comments published in The Sunday Times of London
that were interpreted as anti-Semitic. In an interview with The Times
to promote his documentary “South of the Border,” which is about South
American politics, Mr. Stone defended [sic] Hitler. “Hitler was a
Frankenstein, but there was also a Dr. Frankenstein,” he said. “German
industrialists, the Americans and the British. He had a lot of
support. Hitler did far more damage to the Russians than the Jewish
people.” Mr. Stone then proceeded to discuss what he called “the
Jewish domination of the media,” adding with an expletive that Israel
had messed up “United States foreign policy for years.” Bloggers
quickly picked up on the comments, and the American Jewish Committee
issued a news release condemning him. “By invoking this grotesque,
toxic stereotype, Oliver Stone has outed himself as an anti-Semite,”
the committee’s executive director, David Harris, said in the release.
Mr. Stone, whose next Hollywood movie, “Wall Street: Money Never
Sleeps,” will be released by 20th Century Fox on Sept. 24, has stirred
controversy with his comments in this arena before. In January the
director told a gathering of television critics that “Hitler is an
easy scapegoat” while discussing his Showtime nonfiction mini-series,
“Secret History of America.” At that time the Simon Wiesenthal Center
harshly rebuked him for the remarks. A spokesman for Mr. Stone was not
immediately available to comment.

-- 
Jim Devine
"All science would be superfluous if the form of appearance of things
directly coincided with their essence." -- KM
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