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Disney+ Suspect boss reacts to 'controversial' backlash over recreating London bombings aftermath
Disney+ Suspect boss reacts to 'controversial' backlash over recreating London bombings aftermath

Daily Mirror

time30-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

Disney+ Suspect boss reacts to 'controversial' backlash over recreating London bombings aftermath

Disney+ drama Suspect: The Shooting Of Jean Charles De Menezes has faced backlash for the recreation of tragic real-life scenes. Disney+'s drama Suspect, which recreates tragic real-life events, is set to premiere this week amidst controversy. The Shooting Of Jean Charles De Menezes, launches on Thursday, 30th April, and will first tackle the harrowing London bombings that claimed 52 lives twenty years ago before focusing on the shooting of Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes. ‌ During a screening, host Nina Hossain addressed the "backlash" over the dramatisation of the bombings. ‌ Executive producer Kwadjo Dajan responded to the criticism, saying, "One of the criticisms that we had was that we hadn't consulted with victims, groups of people associated with the real events but the reality is we had. "I actually have a personal connection. I knew one of the victims from 7/7 and we also spoke to various people and wrote letters." He acknowledged the sensitivity of depicting such stories, noting, "When you make these types of stories, there are understandably a lot of people who were impacted by it, they have a sense of ownership. "Their lives become defined by these events afterwards and so they feel it is for them to tell the story and nobody else." Dajan voiced his belief that there's been some "mischief making in the press" over claims that their programme failed to caution about the reenactment of a blown-up bus or police storming into the station. ‌ He stated: "We are responsible filmmakers. In reality, we spoke to lots of people over a number of weeks, contacted people, given people the opportunity to go into hotels while we were filming etc. "And a big giveaway that it wasn't a real event was that we had lights everywhere and a guy shouting action and cut every two minutes. ‌ "So just the way in which those things are reported, I get, if you write a story that they went about things really responsibly and everything was well managed, you're not going to really sell a lot of papers. "We don't take for granted the responsibility and the pain and the hurt they've experienced and for us, that was at the forefront of every step of the way." "Through our legal team, through Disney's legal team, and just morally, we felt an obligation to behave in a way that was fitting to this event."

Emily Mortimer to play Cressida Dick in show about Jean Charles de Menezes death
Emily Mortimer to play Cressida Dick in show about Jean Charles de Menezes death

The Independent

time18-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

Emily Mortimer to play Cressida Dick in show about Jean Charles de Menezes death

Actress Emily Mortimer is to play Dame Cressida Dick before she became the head of the Metropolitan Police, in a new drama about the shooting of a Brazilian man wrongly suspected of being a terrorist after the 7/7 London bombings. Jean Charles de Menezes was killed a fortnight after suicide bombers exploded devices on three Tube lines and a London bus on July 7 2005, killing 52 people. Mr de Menezes' parents and other relatives are serving as consultants for Disney+ series Suspect: The Shooting Of Jean Charles De Menezes. Mortimer, known for family film Paddington In Peru and US drama The Newsroom, will portray the senior officer who led the police operation in which Mr de Menezes – played by Edison Alcaide in the show – died. Dame Cressida was promoted to Metropolitan Police Commissioner in 2017, before leaving the role in 2022. A jury cleared her of any blame in the 27-year-old's death at the end of the prosecution of the Met under health and safety laws. The cast also includes Irish actor Conleth Hill, best known as the manipulative Lord Varys in hit show Game Of Thrones, as then Met commissioner Ian Blair, who led the force between 2005 and 2008 before becoming Lord Blair of Boughton. Being Human star Russell Tovey plays deputy assistant commissioner Brian Paddick, who later became Liberal Democrat peer Baron Paddick, who resigned in 2007 after a dispute with the Met in the wake of the shooting at Stockwell station. Mad Dogs and Bodies actor Max Beesley is cast as assistant commissioner Andy Hayman, who led the Met's investigation into the bombings, and Line Of Duty star Daniel Mays takes on the role of Cliff Todd, the principal forensic investigator in the aftermath of the events of 7/7. Gavin And Stacey actress Laura Aikman stars as Lana Vandenberghe, an admin assistant turned whistleblower at the then Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC), which was later replaced by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC). Ms Vandenberghe handed confidential documents to ITV News, revealing that Mr de Menezes had done little to arouse suspicion before he was gunned down. The IPCC Stockwell Two report claimed that Lord Blair of Boughton was 'almost totally uninformed' after the shooting and Mr Hayman 'misled' senior officers by failing to tell them the dead man was not one of the four bombers. The Crown star Alex Jennings is taking on the role of barrister Michael Mansfield KC, who represented Mr de Menezes' family at the inquest into his shooting, for the four-part drama. Writer and executive producer Jeff Pope said: 'This is an incredibly important story to tell, and we've got a heavyweight ensemble cast in place that will help us examine the events that led to the tragic shooting of the innocent Jean Charles de Menezes. 'He was just a commuter who was tracked for nearly an hour, with surveillance failing to correctly identify him, before he was shot dead on a crowded Tube train, leaving his family to try and shine a light on the critical errors that led to this devastating tragedy.' The inquest jury returned an open verdict into the shooting, and concluded police marksman, dubbed C12, did not shout the words 'armed police' before opening fire, and a number of failings by that contributed to Mr de Menezes' death. At the time, Sir Paul Stephenson, then acting commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said the force accepted 'full responsibility' for the death of electrician Mr de Menezes. Suspect: The Shooting Of Jean Charles De Menezes was written by Pope, who was nominated for an Oscar along with Steve Coogan for their screenplay Philomena, produced by Kwadjo Dajan and directed by London To Brighton director Paul Andrew Williams. This year marks the 20th anniversary of the 7/7 bombings, in which 52 people were killed and more than 770 others injured. Sky has made a documentary called 7/7: Britain's Day Of Terror, the BBC released 7/7: The London Bombings earlier this year, and in 2024 Channel 4 put out Shoot To Kill: Terror On The Tube. In the Channel 4 programme, firearms officer C12 claimed he was certain 'we were going to die' if he did not act. – Suspect: The Shooting Of Jean Charles De Menezes will air on Disney+ in spring 2025.

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