Green Knight said:
I don't know what comments you're talking about it, but remember the context. The man was being publicly villified, castigated, and accused of being an anti-semite. The only way it seemed Mel could placate some of his critics would be to make a movie about him crucifying his father, rather then Jesus. The hate directed in his way got REALLY bad, and is still going on. Suffice to say, when you're getting attacked from all sides people tend to lose their cool in situations like that. I've got issues with my father, but I'm not about to tear him to pieces in public the way a lot of these critics wanted Mel to do to his. Would anyone else be willing to do that to their father, even though their father may've said/done some bad things, just to appease someone who's been relentlessly attacking and insulting you?
Without getting too deep into the issue, this being EnWorld and all, I think you have dismissed his critics as simply "haters" a bit too lightly. Mel could have "plactated his critics" by saying that he loves his dad, but disagrees with his father's views concerning both jews and the issue of the holocaust. That's it. Nobody was asking him to denounce his father for all time and for all things, nor was he asked to tear his father apart.
If my dad, for example, went around insulting black people and using the N-word on TV, and I was making a film about black slavery, you can bet I would say "I love my dad, but we obviously disagree about some issues, and this is one of those issues".
The issue was relevant given the film he was making. The context is a film called Passions of Christ, which in Europe just so happens to have been the name of a certain type of plays, called Passion Plays, which were about this very subject and which also played a huge role in "villifing, castigating, and accusing" the jews of all sorts of evil, pre-WW2, and fostered massive anti-semitism which helped lead to the creation of the very holocaust Mel's father denies. Add to that the fact that Mel portrays many (but not all) jews as particularly evil in this film, originally including a line from only one gospel which historically was used to "villify, castigate, and accuse" Jews throughout the world of all sorts of evil, portray's Pilot (who history tells us really was actually very evil, and considered a mass murderer by most) as a relatively sympathetic character, and I think it is fair to at least ask Mel what is up.
What his dad said is relevant since Mel claims his dad never lied to him about anything, including the holocaust, in the context of Mel having made a film with a rather suspicious title, originally including a rather suspicious line which even the Catholic church denounced in Vatican 2, and some rather suspiscious portrayals of jews when compared to the Pilot character.
It's fair for people to ask Mel questions about this issue, without being tarred as people who simply hate Mel. You should be able to ask questions about this kind of thing without being lumped into the catagory of hater.
As for the movie itself, I saw it, I liked it, and I don't think it was anti-semetic. And yet, I agree with critics who say his decisions regarding the Pilot character were both unfortunate and inaccurate.