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I don't think his incident will affect viewers. Most people have been drunk and done or said something stupid that they had to apologize for.
For whatever reason I don't go out to the theater that often, but if I did I'd be interested in seeing Apocalypto. Mel's comments were embarrassing to say the least, and I'm not entirely convinced by his "apology", but what he chooses to do in his daily life has no bearing on whether or not I'll go see his latest film.
Dostoevsky was an out-and-out antisemite. It doesn't make his books any worse, so I'll not stop reading them.
Mel Gibson might not be one. It doesn't make his films any better, so I'll not start watching them.
Woah. That's all very eruditely put* and I agree with a lot of it. I would recommend Leonid Tsypkin's "Summer in Baden-Baden" for a spectacular look at the problem of how to relate to Dostoevsky's anti-semitism as a Jew; great book.
But really, the only reason I brought up Dostoevsky was to point out that sometimes it's healthy to keep at least a little distance between artist and art (for lack of a better word). A lot of my favourite musicians, writers, directors and actors have habits, personality traits or opinions I find despicable; if I were to get too hung up on that, I wouldn't be able to enjoy any of it. Even if Dostoevsky was an anti-semite in his personal life, his books (for the most part) tell of a much more compassionate view of the human race, and that's what I take with me from them - not his private opinions. (Again, I'll refer anyone interested to "Summer in Baden-Baden"; read it, love it, treasure it.) Just like watching a Roman Polanski movie doesn't make me want to become a rapist, or listening to Miles Davis makes me want to shoot heroin and abuse women.
That said, I'm not interested in defending Gibson. If I thought he was worth defending as an artist I might point out that the "two Dostoevskys" argument can be applied to Gibson as well, but I won't since I consider him a crap actor, a crap director, and by all accounts (not just his despicable comments about Jews) not a very nice person, and I wouldn't be putting money in his pockets anyway. I was just making a point, 'sall.
* Though I'm wondering if they're really "your thoughts"? You might have given credit to David McDuff. But thanks for directing me to it even if you didn't write it yourself; it was very interesting reading.
While filming the movie Apocalypto in the jungles of Mexico's Veracruz state, Mel Gibson donated money to build houses for poor people in the region after some severe flooding wiped out many homes, stating: "[T]hey had a lot of floods down there. It was like Louisiana down there in the southern regions. They had severe flooding and something like a million people were displaced and washed out. I've always been of the opinion that if you go into someone else's country to make a film you don't just go in there and stomp all over the place. You bring a gift. It's like going to somebody's house. You bring them a bottle of wine or a bunch of flowers or a box of chocolates and it's the same sort of thing on a big scale when you're going in to somebody's country and they are going to help you make your film. You help them first somehow or you give them a gift or you help in what way you can. So we sort of assisted with the flood relief stuff down there."