In an exclusive televised interview with Chris Hayes on MSNBC’s “All In,” director Quentin Tarantino said he was “surprised” by the backlash against comments he made at an anti-police brutality protest last month. “They want me to shut up,” he added.
During an appearance at a New York City rally organized by RiseUpOctober, the “Django Unchained” filmmaker said, “I’m a human being with a conscience. If you believe there’s murder going on then you need to rise up and stand up against it. I’m here to say I’m on the side of the murdered.” His remarks led intense criticism in conservative media and calls for boycotts from police unions nationwide.
“I was under the impression I was an American and that I had First Amendment rights, and there was no problem with me going to an anti-police brutality protest and speaking my mind,” Tarantino told Hayes. “Just because I was at an anti-police brutality protest doesn’t mean I’m anti-police.”
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Tarantino said there was one clear message that the activists were united behind: “Stop shooting unarmed people.” But the Oscar winner believes his critics would rather “start arguments with celebrities” than deal with the concerns of everyday citizens.
The director says he was invited by RiseUpOctober to attend a three-day event after recent statements he’d made showed solidarity with their anti-police violence message and concern about what Tarantino described as “white supremacy in this country.”
“There’s a lot of statistics going around about how many unarmed people have been killed by the police but we want them to stop being numbers, we want them to stop being statistics and start being people who were once living and breathing and are now dead,” Tarantino said.
Critics of Tarantino’s actions have brought up the fact that an NYPD officer, Randolph Holder, had been shot and killed in the line of duty less than a week before the protest took place. “The timing was very unfortunate, and his death, that officer’s death is a tragedy and I acknowledge that 100% and my heart goes out to him and goes out to his loved ones,” Tarantino told Hayes, but he reiterated that this was not the “point” of the protest and that the families of shooting victims involved couldn’t reschedule just because its would be “convenient.”
Meanwhile, the attacks on Tarantino have extended to the floor of Congress, where Republican Rep. Ted Poe of Texas claimed on Wednesday that the filmmaker had “called for violence against law enforcement” and that his remarks at the protest were “idiotic.”
“That’s their way, they’re being inflammatory, they’re slandering me. I’m not a cop hater,” Tarantino said in response on “All In.”








