Philip Morris Wants Marlboro Scene Cut from Film
Philip Morris USA is calling on Paramount Pictures to remove a
scene in the new film, "Twisted" that shows actor Samuel
L. Jackson lighting up a Marlboro cigarette, the Wall Street Journal
reported June 14.
"We believe the motion-picture industry should voluntarily
refrain from portraying or referring to cigarette brands or brand
imagery in movies," Philip Morris Senior Vice President Howard
Willard III wrote in a letter to Paramount Pictures.
The tobacco giant wants the cigarette scene removed from all versions
of "Twisted" licensed for future broadcast, including
the DVD set for release Aug. 31.
Facing pressure to reduce the appeal of cigarettes to youth, some
cigarette makers are urging Hollywood to remove references to cigarette
brands from films and scripts. "It isn't enough for a tobacco
company to say, 'We had nothing to do with our brand of cigarettes
being in that movie,'" said Michelle Fogliani, deputy attorney
general for California, who is pressuring tobacco companies to comply
with the 1998 nationwide tobacco settlement and take "commercially
reasonable" steps to prevent the unauthorized use of their
brand names in films.
But Paramount Pictures has refused to edit the film, saying it
would require a lot of work.
"The cigarette-brand owners are saying, 'We don't want our
trademarks appearing in your films.' But the movie producers properly
respond, 'We have a First Amendment right to show these products,'"
said David Bernstein, a partner with the New York law firm Debevoise
& Plimpton.
State attorneys general are hoping that pressure from tobacco companies
would lead Hollywood to reduce smoking in the movies.
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