Grappling with the ‘Mel factor’

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Even before Mel Gibson’s drunken, anti-Semitic tirade this summer, his upcoming film “Apocalypto” was a tough sell, the Los Angeles Times reports.


Graphically violent, subtitled and cast with relatively unknown actors who speak their lines in an obscure dialect, Gibson’s tale of a collapsing Mayan civilization was already outside Hollywood’s mainstream fare. Then came Gibson’s humiliating drunken driving arrest on a Malibu highway in July, which overnight threatened to turn the Oscar-winning director from the film’s biggest asset into its biggest liability.


Starting Thanksgiving night, distributor Walt Disney Studios kicks off a campaign aimed at shifting attention from Gibson’s foibles and onto his movie. Up against what the industry is calling “the Mel factor,” the director will appear on a prime-time special on Disney’s ABC network, hoping to blunt any damage that he may have caused “Apocalypto.”


Hosted by Diane Sawyer, who snared Gibson’s first post-arrest interview last month, ABC is devoting an hour to the Dec. 8 release. The program was arranged before Gibson’s arrest, and includes footage the network shot on location while he was filming in Mexico. ABC has been heavily promoting the program, advertising it on such hit shows as “Desperate Housewives.”


Gibson, who co-wrote and produced the movie but does not appear in it, also agreed to a similar prime-time special on Univision’s weekly news magazine show “Aqui y Ahora” (“Here and Now”) on Nov. 30 with co-host Teresa Rodriguez as part of a promotional blitz aimed at Latinos. One night before “Apocalypto” debuts in theaters, Gibson is scheduled as a guest on “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno.”


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