The new HBO biopic âPhil Spectorâ doesnât make it debut until March 24, but it has already been panned both by Mr. Spectorâs wife and the family of Lana Clarkson, an actress for whose 2003 murder he is currently serving 19 years to life in prison.
Rachelle Spector, in an interview with âEntertainment Tonight,â denounced the movie, which is directed by David Mamet and stars an extravagantly bewigged Al Pacino, for depicting her husband as âa foul-mouthed megalomaniacâ and âa Minotaur, like he draws people into his labyrinth and he locks them in and wonât let them out.â
Meanwhile, Edward Lozzi, a representative for Ms. Clarkson, and two others stood outside a screening in Los Angeles on Thursday with signs reading âHBOâs âPhil Spectorâ Murders the Truth. No Emmy for the film that hurts people alive today,â according to The Hollywood Reporter. Mr. Lozzi told the Reporter the movie focused too strongly on Mr. Spectorâs defense, which argued that Ms. Clarkson had in fact killed herself.
HBO defended the film in a statement as mainly an âexploration of the client-attorney relationshipâ between Mr. Spector and his defense attorney, Linda Kenney Baden, played by Helen Mirren. âMamet approaches the story of Phil Spector as a mythological one, not as a news story, and the film is not an attempt to comment upon the trial or its outcome,â the statement said.
In a 2011 interview with The Financial Times, the Reporter noted, Mr. Mamet suggested that Mr. Spector might be innocent. âThey should never have sent him away,â Mr. Mamet was quoted as saying. âWhether he did it or not, weâll never know, but if heâd just been a regular citizen, they never would have indicted him.â