Woody Allen's
adopted daughter, Dylan Farrow, finally came out in the open, to the world,
about the abuse she suffered at the hand of her adopted father, Woody Allen.
This is my reaction.
I can't remember
the last time I saw a Woody Allen movie. Maybe in the 80s? I don't know why,
but the luster wore away from one of two things, either he wasn't funny
anymore, or well, just that. I didn't find his films as entertaining as I once
did. Or maybe it was about the time the news hit that he had been cheating on
his wife (common law), Mia Farrow, with his step-daughter, Soon-Yi Previn. I
remember how sickened I felt.
Although I can't
really say I've ever held Allen out to be one of my idols, I did think his
early movies were hilarious, and I would rent them from time to time to get a
"dose of Allen" when I needed it.
I won't mention the titles of the movies, any of them, because that
would detract from what I have to say.
Saturday's New York Times ran an open letter by Allen's adopted daughter, then Dylan Farrow. In it, she
pours out a story few have heard, many have refused to hear, and probably many
knew and refused to say they knew. That she had been sexually assaulted as a
little girl.
She gave the reason
for writing the article now because she said that after hearing that her father
accepted the Lifetime Achievement Award at the annual Golden Globes last month,
she couldn't let the truth be jammed behind the curtains any longer (my words,
not hers). That she was tired of everyone giving this man praise while she
re-lives the ugly things Allen did to her as a little girl, telling her it was
"their secret." The fact they even chose to honor this man in spite
of his sordid personal affairs, is testament to how much money holds sway over
morals and decency in this world.
What is particularly
haunting about this is that I can imagine the man saying that line, "it's
our little secret..." as if he were in one of his movies. I can't, or
won't, imagine him as a predator, as I find the act of child abuse and child
molestation such a terrible crime, I can't imagine it from any angle. And,
according to his adopted daughter, Woody Allen committed a crime. I have no
reason to doubt her, especially since her own brother, Ronan, another Allen
adoptee, won't even go near his "father" because of the Soon-Yi
marriage.
I'll keep this
short. Bottom line is that the Connecticut Prosecutor came out after the letter
ran and said he couldn't prosecute Allen, then, or now. Then, because he said
he didn't have enough evidence, and now, because it is too late.
So another child
predator is loose because of the old "he said-she said" glitch. Woody
Allen says it never happened, or that his daughter was too young to know
the difference between fatherly love and
abuse. He even went to far as to say again on Sunday that he found the
revelation disgusting. Hell, who knows. Again, he said, she said. But my money
is riding on Dylan.
What troubles me
even more, is this. Like every good plot in a movie, there is a twist...
Allen, along with
his wife, Soon-Yi have two daughters. How utterly convenient for this closet
rapist. This ugly piece of filth (so much for being non-judgmental) that got
away with ruining a young girl's life, got two more opportunities, and how many
untold more, what with sleep-overs, birthday parties. A predator's work is never
done.
This is the second
case this week that I've seen how money can corrupt judgment, especially in the
case of caring for young children, young children whose only crime was being
adopted or born into a family with a damaged adult and unlimited wealth.
I wasn't there so
I'm going to have to go with my gut on this one and say that it did happen. And
because of that gut feeling, I promise never to see another Woody Allen movie
in my lifetime because of this. If the allegations are true, and I have no
reason to believe that they aren't, then we all should at least do something to
show this woman that we hear her and we are on her side. Show her she didn't do
anything wrong, but everything right, especially coming out against a big name
like Woody Allen.
Next time you even
consider seeing one of Allen's movies, think that possibly that money you are
spending is going into his pocket and helping him pay hush money to those
around him to keep him out of jail.
Maybe, by law, it
is too late to prosecute Woody Allen, but it can never be too late to try him
for his actions in the court of public opinion. Obviously, his receiving his
latest award shows that not enough of us spoke up the first time and for that,
I truly apologize to all the Allen children.
And to Dylan. I'm
sorry that this happened to you. If nothing else, your "father" got
one thing right. You are a good girl, and he, a very, very bad man.
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