Newsletter Newsletters Events Events Podcasts Videos Africanews
Loader
Advertisement

Brad Pitt director's apology amid Nazi uniform Remembrance Sunday fury

Brad Pitt director's apology amid Nazi uniform Remembrance Sunday fury
Copyright 
By Euronews
Published on
Share Comments
Share Close Button

A movie director has apologised after actors in Nazi uniforms were filmed in an English village on Remembrance Sunday.

David Ayer, the man behind Brad Pitt’s latest film Fury, expressed his “heartfelt apologies for any disrespect”.

One UK newspaper said producers rejected a plea from parish councillors in Shirburn, Oxfordshire, to stop filming for the weekend.

But Ayer, issuing his apology on Twitter, said filming had stopped at 2am on Remembrance Sunday, the day the UK remembers its war dead.

He added: “My heartfelt apologies for any disrespect on Remembrance Day. I am a veteran myself. It is an honor (sic) to film here in the UK.

“We stopped filming 2 AM Sat night. We didn’t go until dawn. The story has been a tad exaggerated. Apologies though.”

Labour Defence Minister Kevan Jones said: “I’m astonished producers would not consider it to be inappropriate to film such scenes on Remembrance Sunday.

“And it is outrageous appeals from locals to reconsider plans to film on such an occasion were ignored.”

My heartfelt apologies for any disrespect on Remembrance Day. I am a veteran myself. It is an honor to film here in the UK.

— David Ayer (@DavidAyerMovies) November 11, 2013

Go to accessibility shortcuts
Share Comments

Read more

The Catholic Church beatified nearly 200 martyrs in major ceremonies in Spain and France

WWI soldiers' messages in a bottle found on Australian beach more than 100 years later

US Senate candidate Graham Platner gets new tattoo to cover one with Nazi links