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   I am passing on this message on to you.
Please pass this important message on to as many people as possible.  Thank you.

CINDERELLA MAN

 

When Americans are unemployed,
they put even more out of work to make this movie.

The highly publicized film "Cinderella Man" opens June 3. It is a classic American story in every way, with one exception: where it was made. It was filmed in Toronto instead of the United States, using labor heavily subsidized by the Canadian government. How ironic that this story of a man literally fighting to provide for his family at the height of the Depression should be filmed in a foreign country, costing America hundreds of middle-class jobs and contributing to the dangerous trade imbalance which now deeply concerns our economic experts.

James J. Braddock, the "Cinderella Man," was born in New York City to Irish immigrant parents. His is a real-life "Rocky" story. He was a poor local boxer struggling to support his family when, fighting as a ten-to-one underdog, he defeated Max Baer to become the heavyweight champion of the world in 1935. Seventy years later, the crowds cheering him on to victory in the film about his life are no longer Americans because the background artists portraying them are Canadians, as is the overwhelming majority of people employed in the making of this movie. Material that should be triumphantly American is counterfeit, a cheap and tawdry imitation of who we are.

In recent years millions of American jobs have been outsourced overseas to take advantage of lower labor rates. However, Canada and Australia, where "Superman" is now being filmed, are hardly third world nations. Unlike other industries, in the case of film and television production labor costs are made artificially lower in these and other countries by government subsidies which violate our trade agreements.

When 28 members of Congress sent a letter of protest over the choice to film James Braddock's story in Canada, the studios which produced "Cinderella Man" claimed they went to Toronto because it was the only place that had the right architecture. That's a lame excuse for a purely monetary decision. Plenty of cities in the United States still have buildings with the historically correct "look" for this picture. The studios went to Canada because one third of their labor costs were kicked back by the government, pure and simple.

The outsourcing of this and other productions in order to take advantage of illegal subsidies offered by foreign governments is more than just a moral and patriotic outrage. It doesn't only cost American jobs. It is also a very real threat to the economic stability of the United States. The filming of American movies and TV shows in foreign countries contributes to our ballooning trade deficit and the devaluation of our dollar against other currencies. As a result, outsourced production harms every single American citizen in a very real way.

Like the great champion James Braddock, you have the power to fight back. Send a message that the outsourcing of his story is not acceptable to Americans. DO NOT CONTRIBUTE TO "CINDERELLA MAN" PROFITING LITERALLY AT YOUR EXPENSE BY BUYING A TICKET (or buying the DVD or renting the cassette when they become available.)

Send a personal message directly to the people responsible for the decision to take the production of this most American story and the many jobs it generated to a completely foreign country by writing the producers of "Cinderella Man:"

Brian Grazer
Ron Howard
Imagine Entertainment
9465 Wilshire Blvd., 7th Floor
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
Fax: 310-858-2020
Phone: 310-858-2000
 
Bob Weinstein
Harvey Weinstein
Miramax
375 Greenwich St.
New York, NY 10013
Fax: 212-941-3949
Phone: 212-941-3800
 
Ron Meyer
Universal Pictures
100 Universal City Plaza
Universal City, CA 91608
Fax: 818-777-2500
Phone: 818-777-1000
 
Penny Marshall
Parkway Productions
7150 La Presa Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90068
Fax: 323-874-3124
Phone: 323-874-6207
 
 

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