The Reckoning: Hollywood's Worst Kept Secret (2018) Poster

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7/10
a one hundred year old couch to the dumpster (finally)
ferguson-66 November 2018
Greetings again from the darkness. The #MeToo and #TimesUp movements are in full force, and if you somehow missed "what happened", director Barry Avrich's film will fill you in and get you caught up. As an expose', it's a bit late to the party, but as a look at how we got here, it's pretty much right on the nose. The film opens with a proverbial cold slap to the face of viewers. We hear the Howard Stern interview where movie mogul Harvey Weinstein denies any type of sexual malfeasance exists in Hollywood. Weinstein, of course, is the poster boy for sexual misconduct in the movie industry. He's a man who has kept the "casting couch" alive for three decades; although as we've learned, it certainly wasn't Weinstein acting alone (unfortunately).

Much of the film is focused on Weinstein, and justifiably so. He is described as talented AND a monster - also as cunning, witty, brilliant, and devastating. This man was such a megalomaniac that he structured his business around two things: making money on independent films and using his position of power and influence to put women in compromising and unsafe situations. He went so far as to utilize "honey pots" - female assistants who could gain the trust of the actresses and help lure them to his web of sleaze. One of these former assistants, Zelda Perkins, is interviewed and sheds light on the process.

Many others are interviewed for the film. Writers, reporters, agents, lawyers, a psychologist, and actresses all tell their stories and insight. Weinstein is not the only name that's named. The film also touches on: Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Bill Cosby, Bill O'Reilly, Woody Allen, Louis CK, Aziz Ansari, Olympic Doctor Nassar ... and even Pepe Le Pew (from Looney Tunes). A segment is dedicated to the audacity and despicable actions of director James Toback (known as the dream killer), and Tippi Hedren and Joan Collins talk about "that's the way it's always been". We learn Mack Sennett is credited as being the founding father of the casting couch (in the early 1900's), though numerous studio heads, producers and directors have since preyed on the ambitions of wannabe starlets.

In an awkward segment, acting legend Meryl Streep admits "I'm taking some hits" after having been targeted by street artist Sabo with #SheKnew posters. If nothing else, this underscores just how difficult it has been for women to speak up ... at least until now. Dozens and dozens of women have come forward with their stories, leaving us hopeful that this blight on the industry might be over for good. Leonard Cohen's biting song "Everybody Knows" is put to good use here.

When one of his victims recalls the story where he gifted her a copy of Fitzgeralds' "The Last Tycoon", and Weinstein bluntly stated, "that's me", we begin to understand that this monster was not just about control ... he was out of control. He lost his barometer on right and wrong, and it became about what he was entitled to in his position at the top of the movie making world. Thanks to some courageous women, he no longer has that power position, and with forums like this film from director Avrich, it's likely no other predator in this industry will ever again be able to abuse the power to the extent we've seen from Harvey Weinstein.
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10/10
Very powerful film
deexsocalygal10 February 2019
I was blown away at what's happening in Hollywood regarding sexual misconduct. Actresses are being taken seriously for the first time. Big actors and big corporations are going under. The Weinstein Co & Miramax for God's sake! It shocked me but at the same time made me understand how serious this issue is. So many women have been silenced with legal documents, money, or the shame of being told that's just the way it is in Hollywood. They called it the "Casting Couch". I had no idea huge rich actresses were put through crap like that in this day and age. By the end I was raising my first in the air cheering out loud. Good movie.
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5/10
Fallen Men and Soy Boys
lavatch6 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
In viewing this brief film documentary, one has the impression of watching a production of Aristophanes' play "Lysistrata." In that classic comedy, the women of ancient Greece conspire to go on a sex strike and take over the leadership of the city-states, due to the bad behavior of the men.

The film begins with the disgraced Harvey Weinstein shuttling off to rehab for sex addiction in Scottsdale, Arizona. The film ends with the stentorian voice of Oprah Winfrey, triumphantly proclaiming to the thunderous applause of the Hollywood elite that "a new day is dawning" for women. In other words, Oprah was taking charge as a modern incarnation of Lysistrata.

The thesis of the film is most apparent in the words of a female sexual harassment attorney named Jeanne M. Christensen, who appears on camera to proclaim that women are being abused in every sector of America's businesses, industries, government, and universities. In her own words, the harassment is "in every facet of life" today. Ms. Christensen is clearly vying with Oprah for the lead role in "Lysistrata." She also is talking about predatory men in the same manner as Senator Joseph McCarthy and his pit bull attorney Roy Cohn harangued the public about communists in the 1950s.

The filmmakers try their best to pile example after example of the nefarious conduct of the American male, but some of their choices do not stand up under careful scrutiny. A comedian named Aziz Ansari is held up as an abuser, yet he is given no time to tell his side of the story about an unremarkable experience on a date in which the woman cried foul. Woody Allen is fingered as a monster by his daughter Dylan without any corroboration or testimony from others, including family members who believe Dylan is a victim of the false memory syndrome, not parental abuse. Another segment seeks to portray President Trump as an abuser. But the allegations come from no victims or eyewitnesses, only an alt-left Hollywood talent agent named Belle Zwerdling.

To the credit of the filmmakers, a limited amount of air time is given to men who are pushing back against the extremism of the #MeToo movement. The best commentary comes from New York Times reporter Jim Rutenberg, who asserts that thus far in the #MeToo Movement, "fairness has not always been at play."

Another memorable commentator is a street artist named Sabo, who speculates that the only men who will be available to women in the current climate are "soy boys." Here is the definition of the urban slang term soy boys: "males who completely and utterly lack all necessary masculine qualities. This pathetic state is usually achieved by an over-indulgence of emasculating products and/or ideologies." Welcome to the world of Lysistrata, gentlemen!

The story of the Hollywood casting couch needs to be told, and predators like Harvey Weinstein need to be held accountable. But, as Jim Rutenberg points out in the film, the actions of a Bill Cosby drugging and sexually abusing women should not be equated with office flirtation. It is unfortunate that the Brett Kavanaugh hearing was never mentioned in this program because it serves as an instructive warning about the damage to civil liberties that has already eroded the fabric of our civic life, when the accused is not afforded due process. In one rambling speech about due process in this film, the plea for due process was exclusively in support of women's due process with no mention of commensurate rights for men.

Like the most of today's one-sided perspective from the media, this documentary film did not strike an appropriate balance between the ugly truth of sexual predators and the rights of accusers to defend themselves. There is a happy ending to Aristophanes' "Lysistrata," but it is not clear that the same endgame is unfolding today in America.
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2/10
Ir's Donald Trump's Fault!
mekjd12 March 2019
A prolix chronicle of every bad move (one would hope) that Harvey Weinstein ever made, along with a lot of rhetoric from the victims. After ninety minutes the focus shifts to the badness of Donald J. Trump.

Enough said. Dare to take this seriously.
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3/10
A lot not addressed and questions not asked...
arizonashedevil10121 February 2019
Overall it was good but repetitive. We got the jist of deep scars, attacks, etc.

After the first incident, were these people so desparate for an acting career that they placed themselves in situations repeatedly and suffered year after year after year?

Where were the men that these things happened to? They were aware and most of them supportive but what the abuse they suffered?

The dirtbags that performed these behaviors ..do people actually think these individuals are embarrassed? In their minds they accept no responsibility in these acts.

It was a good presentation. But there was no new information. Men did suffer these incidents as well.

But the biggest question for me is...why wait so long to report it? Why go back over and over? Can an acting career be so important??
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Trump derangement syndrome on display
random-7077827 December 2019
Really, serial sexual assaulter Charlie Rose's best pal Ken Auletta lecturing on #metoo? Making Hollywood and the news medias serial rapists about Trump? Please.
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4/10
Golden ticket to fame
allanmichael305 September 2019
Court now case in 2220 lets see................ Is it a crime that woman stalked him and he created an golden moment in hollywood producing some of the best movies ever made. Huge hefner had 10000s plus women looking for fame and they become his girlfriends same thing with weinstein he was fighting women off. But no evidence he raped or police reports just lawers paying of women which is standard practise to reduce media circus. No evidence he put pressure on women for sex as this documentary shows one woman flirt with him filming, her own inappropriate behavior with a married man that she met him earlier and claims that its a business meeting was just a friendly meeting of adults, that when he said can flit with you after she pitched business and she did not say no this is just business only,she started to flit with him to get what she wanted and she could of said off camera we should meet up again soon,he then invites her to his hotel not for business. He was no saint but claims need to be a proven crime, not just hearsay from 20 years ago. Not every person makes it in hollywood and there's a lot of blaming for those that don't. Untouchable (2019) shows similar story. In uk a man claimed former politicians was in a ring and it turned out to be a lie he was after payout.
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