Russell Crowe defines Battle of Gallipoli as ‘invasion’
Actor and director Russell Crowe has spoken out about âthe other sideâ of the Gallipoli story in a candid interview on Australian TV show Sunday Night, defining the Battle of Gallipoli during World War I as an âinvasion.â
Russell Crowe talked to Sunday Night about behind the scenes information of his film âThe Water Diviner,â his first as both an actor and a director.
âThe thing that resounded with me when I read the script was the Turkish perspective, I knew the number of Australian and New Zealanders dead, but I didnât know the number of Turkish dead,â said Crowe.
âYou know, I think, after 100 years, itâs time to expand that mythology. I think we should be mature enough as a nation to take into account the story that the other blokes have to tell. You know, because we did invade a sovereign nation that weâd never had an angry word with.â
The interviewer said he had never heard such a statement before, to which Crowe replied: âI think itâs time it should be said.â
âFor all the heroism you want to talk about, you know, for me, a fundamentally more important conversation is the waste of life ⦠we shouldnât celebrate the parts of that mythology that shouldnât be celebrated,â he added.
Along with Crowe, the movie also stars Olga Kurylenko and Turkish actors Yılmaz ErdoÄan and Cem Yılmaz.
The actor also touched on speculation about his pugnacious personality and work methods.
Crowe had been charged with assaulting a staff member of the Mercer Hotel in 2005 when he threw a telephone, but told talk show host Mike Willesee it had been blown out of proportion.
âI never touched him mate, never laid a finger on him, did not physically hurt him,â...
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