Wednesday, July 04, 2007

TomCruiseFan.com

TomCruiseFan.com

Cruise is banned from second Berlin location

Posted: 04 Jul 2007 04:55 AM CDT

Germany has thwarted Tom Cruise’s plan to make a film about the Second World War plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler for a second time in a move that provoked angry protests from the country’s current Oscar-winning director.

Berlin police refused yesterday to allow the actor and controversial Church of Scientology member to use a police station in the city’s Kreuzberg district to shoot his film, Valkyrie, in which he plays Claus von Stauffenberg, a member of the German nobility who tried to kill Hitler in 1944.

A police statement said the presence of a film crew on the site would hamper the activities of police “so seriously” that permission to use the station as a location could not be granted.

It was the second time that Cruise was refused permission to use a Berlin location to shoot his film. Last week, the German Defence Ministry banned the actor from setting foot on key military sites in the German capital that were to have featured in the production. The ministry said the actor’s membership of the Church of Scientology was the reason behind the ban, and insisted that the makers of the film would not be allowed on its premises “if Count von Stauffenberg is played by Tom Cruise, who has publicly professed to being a member of the Scientology cult”.

Germany’s attempts to thwart Cruise were angrily criticised yesterday by Florian Henckel von Donnersmark, the Oscar-winning German director of the film Other People’s Lives, which graphically depicts the spying techniques of the Stasi, the former secret police force in Communist East Germany.

Writing in Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper, Von Donnersmarck said Cruise’s role as Stauffenberg would “improve Germany’s international image more than 10 World Cup football tournaments”. He added: “The biggest star of the (Second World War) victor nations is not good enough to play our superman Stauffenberg, if this star’s convictions are not exactly in line with those of Germany.”

Germany treats Scientology with suspicion and keeps it under surveillance. MPs have stated publicly that, although it is not banned, they regard the organisation as a cult which recruits impressionable young people and is bent on making money.

Antje Blumethal, a German conservative, defended the ban yesterday, saying: “If we had given permission to film to a leading Scientologist it would have amounted to official recognition for the sect.”

Cruise’s production company has protested and maintains that the actor is ideally suited to play Stauffenberg, a wartime army officer who became a hero in post-war Germany for attempting to assassinate Hitler with a suitcase bomb. The Nazi leader was wounded but survived and Stauffenberg was shot dead by firing squad shortly after the plot was uncovered.

The ban on Cruise has met with incomprehension in the United States. The Philadelphia Daily News was reported in Germany to have remarked in an editorial yesterday: “It would be difficult to find a better way of recalling the Nazi era than by preventing a man from doing his job because of his beliefs.” (The Independant)

‘Lives of Others’ helmer supports Cruise

Posted: 03 Jul 2007 04:56 PM CDT

COLOGNE, Germany — Oscar-winning director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck has come out in support of Tom Cruise playing would-be Hitler assassin Col. Claus von Stauffenberg in Bryan Singer’s “Valkyrie.”

The project, set to begin shooting this month at Germany’s Studio Babelsberg, has been surrounded by controversy. German politicians have criticized the decision to cast Cruise in the lead role because he is a Scientologist, a religion seen in Germany as a dangerous sect.

After a long back and forth, the German authorities also banned Cruise and Singer from shooting “Valkyrie” on location at the Bendlerblock memorial in Berlin. It is the actual location where Stauffenberg and his fellow conspirators hatched the plot to assassinate Hitler with a bomb hidden in a briefcase. It is also where Stauffenberg and the other plotters were executed after the attempt failed.

But in a long op-ed piece for German daily the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on Tuesday, Henckel von Donnersmarck said Cruise was the ideal person to play one of Germany’s few Hitler-era heroes.

“Tom Cruise is the most successful of all the (Hollywood) superstars,” Henckel von Donnersmarck wrote. “His superstar light will illuminate this rare shining moment in the darkest chapter of our history. In doing so, he will do more to improve Germany’s international image than 10 soccer World Cups could.”

Henckel von Donnersmarck said the story of Stauffenberg is almost unknown outside of Germany and that his country should be grateful a star with Cruise’s drawing power has chosen it as his next project.

Henckel von Donnersmarck is well acquainted with the delicate politics of adapting German history. His Stasi drama “The Lives of Others” was an international boxoffice hit, but he had to publicly defend every casting and wardrobe decision made in adapting the reality of communist East Berlin to the screen.

Despite the political opposition to Cruise, “Valkyrie” is deep into preproduction in Berlin and expected to begin shooting at Studio Babelsberg this month. (HollywoodReporter)

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TOM!!

Posted: 03 Jul 2007 11:43 AM CDT

We here at TomCruiseFan.com wish Tom all the best on his birthday! Much love, peace and health for him and his family!

We love you Tom!

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