Title : "I don’t think there’s a single crew member that thinks, 'Oh, this is a great idea for a movie,' it’s just being treated as another job..."
link : "I don’t think there’s a single crew member that thinks, 'Oh, this is a great idea for a movie,' it’s just being treated as another job..."
"I don’t think there’s a single crew member that thinks, 'Oh, this is a great idea for a movie,' it’s just being treated as another job..."
"... but nobody really wants to go to work the next day. It’s summertime and people need work. A lot of people have quit, a lot of people have been fired. The thing about quitting or being fired is they’d just find another person to do it."Said a crew member quoted in "Inside ‘Roe v. Wade’: A Disturbing Anti-Abortion Film Featuring Milo Yiannopoulos and Tomi Lahren/Currently shooting in New Orleans, the secretive project—the brainchild of heir Nick Loeb, most famous for his embryo battle with ex Sofia Vergara—has been mired in chaos" (The Daily Beast), which says "the cast and crew of Roe v. Wade have been quickly dropping out of the project" and seems designed to inspire mass exile from the project. There's the idea that the cast and crew are people who didn't realize what they were getting into...
[Many of the] members of the supporting cast and crew... were told that the film was a vaguely pro-life project tackling the landmark Roe v. Wade Supreme Court case “from another perspective,” only to arrive on set, view the script, and be shocked by the extremity of its point of view. “When I read the first two pages, I was like what the fuck is this?”...... and the subtext I read is: We'll give you a graceful out if you quit now — you just didn't know what you were doing — but if you continue, you'll be a social and professional pariah.
Note: I support abortion rights, but I think the entire debate ought to be presented in public, and that it should never simply become an issue that we leave behind and say is already resolved. New generations deserve to see and understand what has been said and done and to form their own moral, legal, and political ideas on the subject.
Ironically, the constitutional right — which still seems threatened — is based on the idea that women actively think for themselves about the morality of abortion. Look at Planned Parenthood v. Casey (which changed the scope of the Roe v. Wade right in 1992 and then preserved what was left of it based on the principle already-decided cases should stay put):
These matters, involving the most intimate and personal choices a person may make in a lifetime, choices central to personal dignity and autonomy, are central to the liberty protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. At the heart of liberty is the right to define one's own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life. Beliefs about these matters could not define the attributes of personhood were they formed under compulsion of the State.That is, the Court characterized the decision to have an abortion as a deep contemplation that — like religion or philosophy — inherently belongs to the individual and not to the government. The woman's "personhood" must be preserved, and the question of the "personhood" of the unborn is something for her to think about and make a decision about. If the Court is right — and that's something we may be looking at very intensely in the coming years — then the question of the morality of abortion remains alive.
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