On Mel Gibson and Lindsay Lohan


So I know as a blogger I’m supposed to be all over Mel Gibson’s drunk driving arrest in Malibu from late last week, his rambling, anti-Semitic tirade and its alleged quasi-cover-up or suppression courtesy of a celebrity-friendly police department.

In a way, though, I’m simply just much more intrigued at Lindsay Lohan getting awesomely blasted by Morgan Creek Productions CEO James G. Robinson for her serial, late-night partying, corresponding habitual tardiness and its effect on the production of the Garry Marshall film Georgia Rule, co-starring Felicity Huffman and Jane Fonda. That’s a good, old-fashioned Hollywood shaming, folks. I wonder what Hector Elizondo thinks about all this?

Gibson, on the other hand, has been giving off the pungent aroma of craziness for some time now. I mean, was it possible for the guy to become any more hermetic, post-The Passion of the Christ? Robert Welkos and John Horn have a great piece in yesterday’s Los Angeles Times which examines the potential toll all this will take on Gibson’s career. The gist of it is that while actors and directors bounce back from all manner of naughty, idiotic and/or illicit behavior, the bigger the face, the bigger the necessary mea culpa.

For Gibson, who’s grown out that shoe-bomber’s beard and largely shirked firing-line press obligations for The Passion while simultaneously eschewing high-profile acting roles, the warm and fuzzy days of Martin Riggs-style glory may be over. Sure, he could further play out his latter-day career track as self-financier and director of far-out historical epics — his latest outing behind the camera is Apocalypto, set to be released by Disney in December — but without the experience, infrastructure and clout of a major distribution partner, he’d face an uphill battle getting his film(s) in theaters. Gee, I just hope this doesn’t spell doom for Who Killed the Electric Car? On the plus side, it at least means we probably won’t ever have to suffer through Lethal Weapon 5. And I think that’s a win for everyone.

 

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