An actress who starred in an anti-Muslim film
that stirred extremists to protest across the Middle East claims she was
tricked by the filmmaker, who she says lied to the cast about his own name and
the true intentions of the movie.
"They put words in my mouth that were not
in the script and I never said," said Cindy Lee Garcia, who told ABC News
that after she and the other actors had finished shooting their scenes their
dialogue was crudely dubbed over with incendiary attacks on Islam and the
prophet Mohammed that were not in the script.
"Now, I'm sick that people died over
this. I'm exhausted and really hurt and angry," she said of the riots that
have roiled the Middle East.
A clip of the film, "Innocence of
Muslims," translated into Arabic and picked up by Mideast satellite
television networks, helped stir crowds in Egypt, who on Tuesday stormed the
U.S. Embassy in Cairo, replacing the American flag with an Islamic banner.
Extremists who attacked an embassy in Yemen and a diplomatic facility in
Benghazi, Libya, where Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans were
killed, may also have been inflamed by the movie.
The low-budget film, shot on a California
soundstage with limited sets and props, depicts Mohammed as a blood-thirsty
fraud and pedophile.
Garcia said she knew the filmmaker to be a man
named Sam Bacile, whom she says identified himself as an Egyptian American.
"Sam Bacile" has since been revealed to be a likely pseudonym.
No one with the name Sam Bacile appears in any
public records.
A man named Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55,
however, told the Associated Press Wednesday that he was involved in the film's
logistics. Nakoula said he was not Bacile, but a phone record search by the AP
found that Nakoula owned the mobile phone associated with "Sam
Bacile"
The man calling himself "Sam Bacile"
initially told reporters Tuesday that he was an Israeli Jew. Nakoula, however,
told the AP that he is an Egyptian Christian, or Copt.
Calls made by ABC News to several phone
numbers believed to be associated with Nakoula were not immediately returned.
Police were called to his home this morning
because he feared for his safety, according to law enforcement sources.
One prominent Christian extremist has told the
media that he served as a consultant on the film. Another says he agreed to
help distribute the film. Both men have ties to organizations that have been
listed as hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The leader of a third
group made up of Copts has also said publicly that he was involved in the
film's planned distribution.
Garcia said she spoke to "Sam" on
Wednesday and that he revealed to her that "Sam" was not his real
name. She did not ask what his real name was, however. She said Sam told her to
clear her name in public and blame him for the backlash the film has caused.
Garcia and another actor contacted by ABC News
describe production on a low-budget film shot in Duarte, Calif. Most scenes
were filmed in front of a green screen.
"The movie was a complete mess. Totally
amateurish," said another actor on the film who requested anonymity.
Garcia said she was contacted about the role
by her talent agency, and was told the film titled "Desert Warriors"
was "based on life from 2,000 years ago."
According to both actors and confirmed by
excerpts of the script obtained by ABC News, the name Mohammed is never
mentioned. Instead, the character is called "Master George," a name
that like Mohammed has three syllables, which seems to have dubbing easier.
Similarly, though Jews and Christians are mentioned
by name in the script, it also includes the invented word "Bossaic."
It was later replaced with "Islamic."
Garcia, who played the role of a mother
turning her child over to "George," the Mohammed stand-in, delivered
a line in the script that said, "Is your God a child molester?" She
said there was a brief discussion on set about the question, but delivered the line
anyway. In the finished version, the line was overdubbed to say, "Is your
Mohammed a child molester?"
Garcia described herself as a Christian, but
said she did not believe cast members were selected for their religious
beliefs.
"I was just there to do a movie,"
she told ABC News. "Now people are dead. It's not my fault."
UN leader condemns 'hateful' anti-Islam film
UN leader Ban Ki-moon on Thursday condemned the "hateful" anti-Islam film that he said was deliberately intended to incite bigotry.
Ban is "deeply disturbed" by the eruption of deadly anti-US violence in Libya and other Middle East countries caused by the film which mocks Islam, a UN spokeswoman Vannina Maestracci said.
"Nothing justifies such killings and attacks. He condemns the hateful film that appears to have been deliberately designed to sow bigotry and bloodshed," the spokeswoman added.
"At this time of rising tensions, the secretary general calls for calm and restraint, and stresses the need for dialogue, mutual respect and understanding."
The film sparked an attack in which the US ambassador to Libya and three other Americans were killed in the Libyan city of Benghazi, clashes in Yemen in which four people were killed when demonstrators tried to storm the US embassy and violent protests outside the US embassy in Cairo.
The film denigrating the Prophet Mohammed was promoted by evangelical and Coptic Christians living in the United States. The suspected producer is a Coptic Christian living in California. The US government has strongly condemned the film.
Source: AFP/ABC News
Grabe, iba talaga pang usaping relihiyon. Dapat talaga maparusahan yang filmmaker at producer ng film na yan
ReplyDeleteNice post..