The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘Machine-gun like’ interview

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NEW YORK — Film director Oliver Stone, whose series of conversati­ons with Vladimir Putin air next week on Showtime, said he watched Megyn Kelly interview the Russian president on NBC and concluded that “he knew his stuff and she didn’t.”

Kelly’s interview, which aired on the debut of her newsmagazi­ne, Sunday Night with Megan Kelly, on Sunday, “became machine-gun like,” Stone said, and was an example of how American journalism frequently leaves little room for nuance.

“I think she was attractive and she asked hardball questions, but she wasn’t in position to debate or counter him, because she didn’t know a lot of things,” he said.

NBC News President Noah Oppenheim shot back that “no one here is interested in Oliver Stone’s unsolicite­d thoughts on Megyn Kelly’s appearance or his ill-informed opinion of her journalism.”

“But so long as we’re offering each other profession­al feedback, please let him know I don’t think he’s made a decent movie since the early ’90s,” he said.

Putin was combative when asked in the NBC interview about hacking in the U.S. presidenti­al election and relations between Russia and U.S. President Donald Trump’s team. He’s more serene on Showtime, where more than a dozen interviews that Stone conducted with the Russian president between 2015 and early this year unfold one hour per night for four nights starting Monday.

As an example of where he believed Kelly was mistaken, Stone said the claim that 17 U.S. intelligen­ce agencies had concluded the Russians were behind election year hacking and used as a preface for a question had been “walked back.” It was a reference to testimony from James Clapper, former director of national intelligen­ce, about a hacking report by three specific agencies. The independen­t organizati­on Politifact has produced a report that backs Kelly, however, because Clapper had earlier said that all 17 intelligen­ce agencies he had supervised agreed about Russia’s involvemen­t.

Stone, a controvers­ial figure who has interviewe­d Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez and produced a documentar­y backing Putin’s version of events in the Ukraine, conducts a Putin interview far less confrontat­ional than Kelly’s, at least on the basis of two episodes provided for screening by Showtime. One critic, Marlow Stern in The Daily Beast, called in a “wildly irresponsi­ble love letter” to Putin.

The filmmaker’s style does include its share of ingratiati­ng remarks. “You have a lot of discipline, sir,” he says at one point. “You are an excellent CEO. Russia is your company,” he says at another. Besides office sitdowns, Putin is interviewe­d driving a car, walking through horse stables at his home and after he played in a hockey game. When Putin makes a claim about a letter he received from the CIA and Stone asks him to produce it, the Russian president says, “my words are enough.”

 ?? ALEXEI DRUZHININ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin talks with Megyn Kelly during an interview on NBC’s Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly in St. Petersburg, Russia.
ALEXEI DRUZHININ/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Russian President Vladimir Putin talks with Megyn Kelly during an interview on NBC’s Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly in St. Petersburg, Russia.

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