
According to CFCA president Dann Gire, Fox's excuse for granting limited screening invites is that the studio does not trust many critics to honor embargo requests and fears piracy. Specifically, Fox reps told Gire, Internet critics are its worst fear because of their tendency to leak information. "We have a reputation of walking around Chicago with eye patches and parrots on our shoulders," says Gire, who, as a critic for the Chicago Herald, is member of the reviewer A-list. Gire maintains that all critics, even those published in print, are Internet film critics.
"This is very disappointing and unprofessional behavior from Fox executives, who may be one of the few, if not the only, group of publicists in America who believe it's in their best interests to antagonize, alienate, and ignore their clients," Gire wrote in a letter to the studio.
In response CFCA has instituted a boycott against Fox releases, vowing to write nothing but reviews for its movies, withholding the more coveted coverage in features, profiles, and interviews. And they're calling on their film critic brethren to join in. "We've hit a common nerve among all critics' organizations who are suffering under the same kind of tyrannical rule," Gire told Radar. "We have had amazing support from all over the country."
"The studio system is still stuck in this archaic 20th-century vision," he said.
Calls to Fox were not returned.