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Oliver Stone Forum (2)

bastard (Fri Jun 3, 2005 3:44am ET)report post
by kia
he is a bastard
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disgarceful (Fri Mar 25, 2005 4:24am ET)report post
by selina
alexander is a nauseting movie with a tedious story
colin farrell is a strawman with funny face. rosario dawson is not a acress for iranian princess role she is good for arabic notorious woman role.oliver stone is a liar because he directed a movie allover false
.
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Macedonia (Mon Sep 18, 2006 10:18pm ET)report post
by Aleksandar
All the words you have say`d abouth Stone are very with low IQ . Stone is the Truth
Thanck you Oliver For All Youre Great Movies i m enjoyng in them.Stone you have make the best soundtrack of all the times also the realistic movie abouth the hero who no one ever think abouth.
Im Macedonian. My Name is Alexander
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a big liar (Fri Mar 25, 2005 4:15am ET)report post
by babak
oliver stone ia a great liar who directed a movie''alexander'' allover mistake and false and funny.
alexander is a calamity film that directed by a devious man .oliver is a unletterd and foolish because he dont know history.alexander was a bustard like oliver stone.
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oliver stone"incredibly sensitive artist"? (Thu Aug 5, 2004 1:53am ET)report post
by marianna in the u.k.
oliver stone mr. self-proclaimed"god of film" promoter of human-rights abuse(cuba) and sexual-abuse(pornography)
you wanna know what action man war-hero oliver stone is really like?
go to the www. search:the oliver stone incident.

'nuff said.

you have no idea how much you have disappointed me. mr.william oliver stone.

yours sincerely,

miss. marianna jane close.
(united kingdom)
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WHo wrote it. (Wed Jun 2, 2004 6:22pm ET)report post
by Al Valente
Charlie Sheen in Platoon says "Somebody once wrote 'Hell is the impossibility of reason'"

Who was that somebody - does anyone know???? Was there an actual author to that phrase or did Oliver Stone just take a bit of literary license and not give himself credit.

I have never been able to find the answer to this.
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Would love to get a job, fetching his coffee (Fri May 21, 2004 2:19pm ET)report post
by Jack Hamilton
Hello there, Hey Oliver, Can I get a job, you know, fetching your coffee and stuff. Your such a smart fella, it would be fun. Jack
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Untitled (Thu Oct 23, 2003 1:55pm ET)report post
by Judy Smith
Is there anyway that I can send an e-mail to Oliver Stone directly? Let me know. Thank you.
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Untitled (Tue Nov 4, 2003 4:50am ET)report post
by monica
I would like to get in touch with Oliver Stone as I am writing an essay on Vietnam War films and Platoon. but, being a celeb it seems impossible to find him. it must really be hard not to live a normal life and just being surrounded by famous people...
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Artist (Sun Oct 5, 2003 1:16am ET)report post
by Rudy White
My wife has asked me not to tell this story for over 25 years for fear for of our lives.We are all in ill health and now I dont give a dam.I know Mr. stone can do something with this. story. Its a story of heroin during the Vietnam war . If you mention Vientiane & Luang Prabang it will mean something to him. This is not for publication...... yet PLEASE LET ME KNOW ONE WAY OR ANOTHER WEATHER OR NOT IT INTERESTS HIM .THANK YOU RUDY
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New Project for Oliver Stone (Tue Aug 26, 2003 11:50pm ET)report post
by El Hammer
Does anyone know how I can contact Oliver Stone? I would like to discuss a possible film project concerning the murder of Marilyn Monroe. I was out in Beverly Hills two weeks ago and ran into a John Miner at the Beverly Hills Plaza. Mr. Miner is aproximately 85 years old. He was the DA's liason working the case of the death of Marilyn Monroe. The bottom line-He is of the belief that Marilyn was murdered and did not commit suicide. He is trying to get the State of California to reopen the case. What better way to raise the awareness of a possible murder vis a vis suicide than a movie! And, Mr Miner would probably act as an excellent tech adviser.
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Commandante: Myopic Biopic of Castro (Fri May 30, 2003 8:27pm ET)report post
by Cuban Princess
O, Great Hollywood Film Producer Oliver Stone -- the poor dope! If only he'd listened! Why, some of us have tried to tell him for years what Fidel Castro was really like -- but Stone chose to see him from his inimitably, to put it kindly, "revisionist" viewpoint.

The man who has used his immense but perverse film talent to portray just about every American political figure from Kennedy to Nixon as a sap has turned out to be the biggest sap of all.

I refer, for the unschooled reader, to the unrepentant Oliver Stone's latest documentary film, "Commandante," which had him chumming around with the Cuban president for three days last year and emerging enchanted. At the Sundance Film Festival recently, Stone said he found Castro to be "warm and bright," and that he's "a very driven man, a very moral man. He's very concerned about his country. He's selfless in that way."

But just before the film was supposed to be aired on HBO in May, first-class seducer Fidel did in his new admirer, and most probably Stone's newest work. It might have seemed to Stone that Fidel summarily executed three hijackers and sent 75 Cuban writers, poets and thinkers to jail for a accumulated 1,454 years just to thwart his film. But the truth is both more complicated -- and more perfectly clear.

As HBO canceled the planned May premiere of Stone's film, a company spokesman said only that the film appears "somewhat incomplete" in light of recent events, adding, "what's important in Cuba today was not important in Cuba" when Stone did his work there last year. But of course, it was. The Fidel Castro you see today is the Fidel Castro of yesterday, of the day before yesterday and of every future day that he lives.

The young revolutionary Fidel, within months after taking over in the winter of 1959, executed upward of 5,000 "counter-revolutionaries" after raucous kangaroo trials in the sports stadium. These were followed by the infamous "airmen's trial," when Fidel set up 43 innocent airmen to go to jail for 30 years and 10 years' hard labor, by the appalling trial of his "friend" Huber Matos the next fall, by the odd disappearances of virtually every possible political competitor over the years, and with the execution of Cuba's greatest military hero, Gen. Arnaldo Ochoa, in the summer of 1989 on totally trumped-up charges.

Nor did Fidel show the slightest gratitude for the many journalists and writers from all over the world who flocked, like Oliver Stone, to breathe in the miasmic revolutionary air and to rest in awe at his feet. In fact, he always despised the people who worshipped him most -- perhaps, I always thought, because he knew himself what he was really like.

I recall, for instance, a time in the summer of 1966 in Cuba, where I interviewed Fidel a number of times for my biography, "Guerrilla Prince: The Untold Story of Fidel Castro," which was made into a Showtime miniseries last year. This moment showed clearly the derision that the loyalty of his acolytes evoked in him. I was being taken by one of his men to see Fidel and, as we drove across town, the officer started to laugh and gesture at the former Havana Libre Hotel. "Herbert Matthews is there," he said disdainfully. "He's been waiting for eight days to see Fidel. They keep telling him not to go out because Fidel might come. But Fidel hates him and won't see him." Then he laughed, and laughed some more.

Lest anyone forget, Herbert Matthews was the New York Times correspondent who risked his life and his career to report on Fidel while he was holed up in the Sierra Maestra. It was Matthews' glowing reports that first brought Fidel to the rapt attention of the world. Yet in fact, after his victory, Fidel continued to insult Matthews, in public, for the rest of his life.

Once again this winter, the Cuban leader shocked his true believers by suddenly reversing apparent steps toward liberalization. The timing was bad for Oliver Stone and, because of Fidel's unfortunately timed acts, HBO dropped "Commandante" from its May showing.

As a follow-up to Fidel's acts this winter, which were pushed fully to the fore by the Iraq War and new fears of American intervention, a session was held this week at the Brookings Institution here. Latin American specialist Robert Pastor described the moment perfectly: "It's because Fidel Castro will not allow peaceful change or for his people to choose their own leaders."

Oh, there is one more thing. The title of Oliver Stone's film is misspelled. The word in Spanish is not "Commandante," but "Comandante." This is the kind of thing that happens when amateurs play revolution.


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