Rabu, 05 Desember 2007

Driver's ed teacher sues 'Borat' producers (AP)





NEW YORK (AP) -- A driving instructor has sued the makers of the

movie "Borat," accusing them of lying to him about the nature of the

crass comedy by telling him he'd be in a documentary about the

integration of immigrants into U.S. life.



The lawsuit was brought Tuesday by lawyers for Michael Psenicska, a

Baltimore high school mathematics teacher who has owned a driving

school in Perry Hall, Md., for the last 32 years.



The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, seeks $100,000

in compensatory damages and unspecified punitive damages, saying the

hit movie earned hundreds of millions of dollars at the box office.

It says Psenicska is entitled to damages because defendants,

including producer Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. and star Sacha

Baron Cohen, used images of him extensively in advertising the film,

"Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious

Nation of Kazakhstan."



The 2006 film, in which Cohen plays an uncouth Kazakh journalist

traveling across the "U.S. and A." in pursuit of Pamela Anderson, has

led to several lawsuits and criticism that it depicts Kazakhstan as

bigoted and backward. Others who have sued include Southern

conservatives, frat boys, Romanian villagers and a businessman seen

fleeing from a hug from the British comedian.



Psenicska's lawsuit says Fox and Cohen fraudulently induced him to

sign documents approving his appearance in "Borat" just before he was

filmed giving Cohen's Borat Sagdiyev character a driving lesson.



According to the lawsuit, the film's staffers had promised they were

producing a documentary about the integration of foreign people into

the American way of life, a subject that interested Psenicska because

he was in the business of teaching foreigners to drive.



Yet, it says, when filming began, Borat did a hugging and kissing

routine, struggled with his seat belt like a child, drove on the

wrong side of the road, made ethnic slurs, said women had small

brains and rolled down a window and offered a female pedestrian $10

for "sexy time."



Twentieth Century Fox spokesman Gregg Brilliant said Psenicska

consented to the filming.



"He signed a release, and we have an agreement," Brilliant said.

"Now, 2 1/2 years after giving his consent and more than one year

after the movie was released, Mr. Psenicska has decided to file a

lawsuit, citing the financial success of the film, in spite of our

agreement."



 
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