September 23, 2003
Hollywood’s Favorite Child Molester
By
Michelle Malkin
One of the most popular movies currently playing at
the box office,
“Jeepers Creepers 2,” is a teen horror flick
directed by a stomach-turning registered sex offender
who was convicted of molesting a 12-year boy he
targeted, groomed, seduced, and filmed in pornographic
home videos.
Hollyweird strikes again.
The celebrity pervert’s name is Victor Salva. The
scheming Salva wrote children’s books, participated in
the Big Brother program, and worked at a San
Francisco-area daycare center where he met his prey. He
molested the victim, Nathan Winters, from the time the
boy was seven.
Salva pleaded guilty in 1988 to five felony counts of
child sex abuse; he served a measly 15 months of a
pathetic three-year prison sentence.
Winters’ scars will last a lifetime.
Salva made Winters the star of his first feature film,
“Clownhouse,” a revolting low-budget movie about
three murderous clowns who terrorize three young boys.
(The movie won praise at Robert Redford’s Sundance Film
Festival.) While working on the project, Salva forced
Winters to perform oral sex on the “critically
acclaimed” director and captured the acts on tape. When
police raided Salva's home, they found not only the sex
videos of Salva and Winters, but also tapes of naked
young men taking showers and a pornographic album of
still photos.
After he was released on parole, convicted child
molester Salva went on to write and direct the
“critically acclaimed” 1995 movie,
“Powder,” in which he worked with many young actors.
Winters and his mother
bravely went public to protest Salva’s involvement.
But his employers at
Disney—Disney!—stood by him, as did liberal stars of
the film,
Mary Steenburgen and Jeff Goldblum.
Also a staunch defender and patron of convicted child
molester Salva’s: director Francis Ford Coppola, whose
company produced “Clownhouse” and the two Jeepers
Creepers movies.
Convicted child molester Salva’s saviors say their
“talented” friend has paid his debt to society and
should be
left alone to express himself creatively and
contribute positively to the movie industry. Separate
the art from the artist, they preach.
Just move on.
That is patently impossible and irresponsible,
however, when the director’s “art” involves the
continued sexual exploitation of—and twisted obsession
with—young boys.
Consider the wretched plot of Jeepers Creepers 2:
An ancient demon dubbed “the Creeper” preys on teenage
basketball players trapped in a broken-down bus on a
rural highway. Convicted child molester Salva’s camera
lingers on the shirtless torsos of the boys, alive and
dead. The boys, all buff and beautiful in that
pedophilic
Calvin Klein/Abercrombie
and Fitch kind of way, sunbathe on the bus roof. The
lascivious Creeper stalks and harvests his victims,
devouring “certain parts of their anatomy while
laminating the rest,” in the words of one movie
critic.
This orgy of bare skin and blood splatter, the
sophisticated artistes lecture us, is convicted child
molester Salva’s redeeming contribution to society.
Convicted child molester Salva and his corrupt
Hollywood enablers gripe that he made a “single
mistake” and doesn’t deserve to be “slandered.”
The plain fact is that convicted child molesters such
as Salva are
enormously predisposed to reoffending. Sgt. Gary
Primavera, the police officer who handled the Winters
case, said:
“Victor has every
characteristic of a pedophile that I know of - and I've
worked with enough of them. There was no remorse. The
only sadness on Victor's part was that he got caught.”
It is an abomination that this man continues to enjoy
a position of power and influence over young actors,
making movies targeted to teens that indulge his
dangerous sexual fetishes.
The only thing safe and appropriate for convicted
child molester Salva to direct are toilet bowl cleaner
commercials.
Hollywood’s greedy ghouls think otherwise.
“Jeepers Creepers 2” has grossed nearly $40 million
so far and remains in the top 10.
Francis Ford Coppola’s co-executive producer, Bobby
Rock, glibly told the
San Jose Mercury News last week:
“The film did very well
at the box office -- that's all that matters to us.''
Sick.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.