Tarantino says he won’t be intimidated by police boycotts

Tarantino-Police Protest

In this Oct. 24, 2015 file photo, director Quentin Tarantino, center, participates in a rally to protest against police brutality in New York. Calls by police groups to boycott Quentin Tarantino’s “The Hateful Eight” are putting pressure on one of December’s most anticipated releases and inserting one of Hollywood’s top directors into a pitched cultural battle.In recent days, a growing number of police groups have called for the boycott of the upcoming Weinstein Co. release. AP FILE PHOTO

NEW YORK — After a week of backlash from police groups threatening to boycott his upcoming film, Quentin Tarantino stood by his comments about police brutality and said he wouldn’t be intimidated from voicing his opinion.

Tarantino told the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday that law enforcement groups are trying to bully him. “Instead of dealing with the problem of police brutality in this country, better they single me out,” Tarantino told the Times.

“And their message is very clear,” he continued. “It’s to shut me down. It’s to discredit me. It is to intimidate me. It is to shut my mouth, and even more important than that, it is to send a message out to any other prominent person that might feel the need to join that side of the argument.”

READ: Police backlash puts pressure on Tarantino’s ‘Hateful Eight’

The director’s strong response signaled that he wasn’t backing down from what he said last month at an anti-police brutality rally Brooklyn. Tarantino said he was “on the side of the murdered.”

His comments provoked outrage from a growing number of police groups that have called for the boycott of Tarantino’s December release “The Hateful Eight.” They include the National Association of Police Organizations and local groups in New York, New Jersey, Los Angeles, Chicago and Philadelphia.

“Tarantino lives in a fantasy world,” Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck said Tuesday. “That’s how he makes his living. His movies are extremely violent but he doesn’t understand violence. He doesn’t understand the nature of the violence that police officers confront. Unfortunately he mistakes lawful use of force for murder, and it’s not.”

READ: Tarantino, condemned by police, gets support from protesters

Tarantino told the Times “it feels lousy to have a bunch of police mouthpieces call me a cop hater. I’m not a cop hater. That is a misrepresentation. That is slanderous. That is not how I feel.”

“But you know, that’s their choice to do that to me,” the director added to the Times. “What can I do? I’m not taking back what I said. What I said was the truth. I’m used to people misrepresenting me; I’m used to being misunderstood. What I’d like to think is their attack against me is so vicious that they’re revealing themselves. They’re hiding in plain sight.”

Jamie Foxx, the star of his “Django Unchained,” has backed Tarantino. At the Hollywood Film Awards, Foxx said: “Keep telling the truth and don’t worry about none of the haters.”

On Tuesday, the Weinstein Co., the longtime distributor of Tarantino’s films including “Hateful Eight,” said it supported Tarantino’s right to say what he wants.

“We don’t speak for Quentin,” the Weinstein Co. said in a statement. “He can and should be allowed to speak for himself.”

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