Mens Rights Melbourne
Oct 24, 2016
Wow. In only 44 minutes since posting (barely time for a cup of tea!) we are in the top 15% of change.org petitions! And after 3 hours, 250 supporters! Thanks to you all! We still don't have a venue, but David was interviewed by the Herald Sun today. Article below. We'll push on. Help us get there. http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/mens-rights-group-vows-to-push-ahead-with-documentary-screening/news-story/6b13eab641877fe0ed2e527dd489448c Men’s rights group vows to push ahead with documentary screening October 25, 2016 3:47pm KATHRYN POWLEY A scene in the trailer for controversial documentary The Red Pill. MEN’S rights advocates are vowing to screen a controversial documentary after a feminist and “gender warrior” backlash forced them to find new cinema. Men’s Rights Melbourne say a 2300-name petition against a private screening of The Red Pillhampered “free speech”. The film by feminist filmmaker Cassie Jaye was to have had its Australian premier at a private screening at Melbourne’s Kino Cinema on November 6. But Palace Cinemas canned the arrangement. The shutdown came after the change.org petition launched by “Susie Smith” called for Palace not to promote “misogynistic hate” through the film. But organiser, Men’s Rights Melbourne’s spokesman David Williams, 29, said nobody who signed the petition would have seen the film. MORE: PUSH TO KEEP RUSSELL ST BOMBER LOCKED UP He had expected controversy but was not prepared for so many “uninformed extremists”. “If you can state that a film should be banned without seeing it, without any evidence, just a large number of people, that creates a dangerous precedent. It’s a freedom of speech issue.” Although Mr Williams did not blame the cinema for heeding so many complaints he was now seeking a new venue. “I’m determined. I’ll find a way somehow, some way, some place to do this.” The Red Pill charts self-described “staunch feminist” Ms Jaye’s journey into the men’s rights movement. Palace Cinemas publicity manager Caroline Whiteway said the company had responded to patrons’ feedback. “We support freedom of speech and reserve the right to allow private venue hire of our cinemas to a broad cross-section of groups, however at the time of the booking, we were unaware that this screening had the potential to cause distress to our valued clientele,” Ms Whiteway said. Although the film has gained 96 per cent approval on the internet movie rating site Rotten Tomatoes, the LA Times’ said it was “tilted in favour” of men’s rights activists, Ms Jaye “twists herself in knots to justify the movement’s misogynist rhetoric” and exacerbates the divide between men’s and women’s rights activists. And The Village Voice called her a “propagandist” for the movement during the film’s “two agonising hours”. kathryn.powley@news.com.au
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