EXCLUSIVE: When it comes to The Apprentice film screening tonight at the Telluride Film Festival, Donald Trump has proved once again to be all bluster, no bite.
The former president’s campaign may have sent out a vitriolic cease and desist letter earlier this year and threatened legal action against the Cannes premiering Ali Abbasi directed and Gabriel Sherman written movie, but they’ve done nothing.
Back in late May, Trump’s Dhillon Law Group attorneys gave the Apprentice filmmakers until the 27th of that month to essentially shut down anyone ever seeing their acclaimed film. Calling the Canadian, Irish and American funded flick “a concoction of lies that repeatedly defames President Trump and constitutes direct foreign interference in America’s elections,” the Alexandra, VA-based lawyers swore if Abbas helmed movie did “not immediately cease and desist all distribution and marketing of this libelous farce,” then Team Trump would “be forced to pursue all appropriate legal remedies.”
With The Apprentice set for a U.S. release likely on or near October 11 via ex-Open Road CEO Tom Ortenberg’s Briarcliff Entertainment, it looks like the Trump team has decided to walk away from the whole matter and hope it just fades away, according to sources close to the situation.
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So much for an October surprise, at least on the poll sagging Trump’s part as the tight race against Kamala Harris moves into the Election fourth quarter after Labor Day.
Now with the biopic about Trump (Sebastian Stan) as the protégé of noxious lawyer Roy Cohn (Jeremy Cohn) playing right now to a packed house for a suddenly announced screening at the prestigious Colorado cinema fete, those empty ultimatums of May look like typical silly saber rattling by the former Celebrity Apprentice host.
Which is nothing new.
Still employing Cohn’s old dirty tricks, Trump frequently vows legal retribution, and frequently fails to follow through or sees his efforts tossed out of court.
Abbas, Stan, Strong, Sherman and producer/Golden Media boss Amy Baer are at Telluride’s Galaxy Theater tonight for the screening that started at 10 pm MDT/9 pm PT. On-stage, Abbas told the 500-strong crowd that The Apprentice “is not a political hit piece.”
As for the Trump campaign, all they offered when contact by Deadline today about The Apprentice distribution deal and the Telluride screening was a near complete rehash of their statement against the film when it first opened at the Cannes Film Festival three months ago.
“This garbage is pure fiction which sensationalizes lies that have been long debunked, Trump campaign Communications Director Steven Cheung told Deadline today of The Apprentice, which features a sexual assault by Trump of his first wife Ivana (played by Borat alum Bakalova)
“As with the illegal Kamala witch-hunts, this is election interference by Hollywood elites right before November, who know that President Trump will retake the White House and beat their candidate of choice because nothing they have done has worked. This ‘film’ is pure malicious defamation, should never see the light of day, and doesn’t even deserve a place in the straight-to-DVD section of a bargain bin at a soon-to-be-closed discount movie store, it belongs in a dumpster fire.”
With “Kamala” replacing “Biden” and “right before November” added, this statement from the Trump campaign is exactly the same one they put out on May 20 when the lawsuit that has yet to materialize against The Apprentice filmmakers was first threatened.
Or to use a recent line from Vice President Kamala Harris about Trump’s campaign tactics – “Same old tired playbook.”
The post Trump’s ‘Apprentice’ Film Legal Threats Prove Fake News As Film’s Telluride Screening Starts, U.S. Release Looms appeared first on Deadline.