Friday May 16, 1:32 PM
Documentary revives debate about religious satire
CANNES (Hollywood Reporter) - Do we have the right to
caricature God? This and other questions involving religion and
freedom of speech raised by the controversial Danish cartoons
depicting the prophet Mohammed are examined by "It's Tough
Being Loved by Jerks."
The documentary, from Frenchman Daniel Leconte, screens at
the Cannes Film Festival on Friday.
Leconte said he hopes to provoke healthy debate, even if
that upsets some people.
"We have to have this debate, because when we do, we win
the argument," he said. "As soon as you explain that it's not
Muslims that are targeted (in the caricatures) but those who
kill in the name of that religion, it's different. It's like
the difference between the Inquisition and all other Catholics.
I wouldn't put (Tomas de) Torquemada in with Francis of Assisi.
The extremists know they'll lose in debate, so they spread
terror to widen the gap between East and West, between Islam
and democracy."
"Jerks" follows the unprecedented 2007 trial of a French
newspaper for allegedly insulting Muslims, and with radical
Islam a hot topic for international media, it is bound to
attract interest from buyers here.
The movie's starting point is the publication of 10
caricatures by Danish paper Jyllands Posten, which prompted
protests and flag burning in sections of the Arab/Muslim
community worldwide.
When the caricatures subsequently were printed by Gallic
paper Charlie Hebdo, the satirical weekly added a front-cover
cartoon portraying Mohammed weeping into his hands and
declaring: "It's tough being loved by jerks," in specific
reference to Islamic fundamentalists.
The publication prompted the Paris Mosque and other Muslim
organizations to start legal proceedings for "insult towards a
group of people on grounds of their religion" -- interpreted by
the plaintiffs as racism.
"If the plaintiffs win this case, we won't wake up in the
same France," "Shoah" director Claude Lanzmann says in the
film. Lanzmann, whose 1985 Holocaust documentary won a slew of
international awards, testified at the trial. Leconte also was
called as a witness.
The film follows the buildup to the trial and re-creates
the arguments that were presented in court through interviews
with many of the principal protagonists. Charlie Hebdo was
cleared of the charges.
Reuters/Hollywood Reporter
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