OTWO, that sux! It's running here in Canada. And I know how frustrating that is.
Yes, the Isaac Hayes story would be its own documentary. I remember at the time, there were people passing out leaflets about the story downtown - and if I recall, the South Park people had things to say. An early warning sign, imo. Now the truth is coming out because of those who are brave enough to speak.
It was interesting that they went up against the IRS and won. We just don't know how well-connected these cult leaders are.
EDIT: Interesting - I can't play the vid from my link, but I can open a window and it works when I go directly to youtube. And, here is the 'note' on the youtube vid."FULL MOVIE: NO LINKS! THE ACTUAL HBO DOCUMENTARY ON YOUTUBE! NO REFFERAL SCAM!ENJOY, LIKE AND SHARE! SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE.
This video has been blocked in the the USA. If you have problems viewing the Documentary use a web proxy to access youtube over Canada or anywhere mainland Europe. You can also google "unblock youtube videos" should you be affected by the block.
Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief HD 2015 Documentary
No Commercial Gain Is Being Made From This Video, it is for Educational purpose only. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. No Copyright infringement intended. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing, Non-profit, educational, or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. The music in this video remains the property of the copyright holder and images. No challenge of ownership is intended or implied.
The film is based on the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Lawrence Wright's book Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief, which was published in January 2013 and was a National Book Award finalist. HBO announced in December 2014 that Alex Gibney, an Oscar-winning director who made Taxi to the Dark Side and The Armstrong Lie, was directing a film based on the book, to be released at the 2015 Sundance Festival. It was the first time that HBO had tackled Scientology directly, though not the first time it had clashed with the church, which had mounted demonstrations outside HBO's headquarters after a 1998 documentary presented anti-depressant drugs – fiercely opposed by Scientology – in a positive light.
Gibney began working on the film in 2013 after becoming intrigued by Wright's book. He collaborated with Wright, who came on board as a producer, to explore the book's underlying theme of "how people become prisoners of faith in various ways". He saw Scientology as one of the toughest subjects he has had to tackle in his career as a documentarian, alongside government complicity in torture, corporate financial malfeasance, and clerical sexual abuse.
Fear of Scientology's litigiousness meant that no American network was willing to license any material to the film makers, which Gibney found "astounding". He commented that he "found it interesting that universally this subject — more than any other — provoked all the networks to decline to license. I think at the end of the day, that tells you more about Scientology than it does about the networks, which is how ruthless they've been in trying to silence any criticism." The church's reputation for harassing its critics made it necessary for Gibney to use burner phones to contact interviewees and film in secret: "Sometimes for the on-camera interviews we'd set up gear in somebody's house and I'd make sure I'd be there hours before. Then the person would show up there so it was like they were just going to somebody’s house."
Explaining why he chose to make a film about Scientology, he told Reuters that he considered it to be "an important topic. Not only about this church of Scientology, which everybody's fascinated with partially because of the celebrities, but partially because of the way that the church seems to turn people to do things that I think they would normally never do if had they not entered the church." Gibney, Wright and the former Scientologists who appeared in the film told a post-screening question-and-answer session that they hoped that it would raise public awareness about the alleged abuses committed by the Church of Scientology and would prompt the media and law enforcement agencies to investigate further."
[bold is mine]