Warner Bros. declined to comment on the news.
Read Stone’s explanation below, ending with a note to King himself:
Sad news. My MLK project involvement has ended. I did an extensive rewrite of the script, but the producers won’t go with it.
— Oliver Stone (@TheOliverStone) January 17, 2014
The script dealt w/ issues of adultery, conflicts within the movement, and King’s spiritual transformation into a higher, more radical being — Oliver Stone (@TheOliverStone)January 17, 2014
I’m told the estate & the ‘respectable’ black community that guard King’s reputation won’t approve it. They suffocate the man & the truth. — Oliver Stone (@TheOliverStone)January 17, 2014
I wish you could see the film I would’ve made. I fear if ‘they’ ever make it, it’ll be just another commemoration of the March on Washington
— Oliver Stone (@TheOliverStone) January 17, 2014
Martin, I grieve for you. You are still a great inspiration for your fellow Americans—but, thank God, not a saint.
— Oliver Stone (@TheOliverStone) January 17, 2014
While it is always a beautiful thing to highlight and honor the life of Dr. King, and hold him up as a shining example to the world, it is as equally important to point out that he was able to change the world despite his flaws. If we choose to pronounce his attributes while ignoring his humanity it acts as a detourant to the very same people that Dr. King hoped to inspire. In fact it renders the aspirations of those who hope to be like him impossible.
PR
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