Russia sympathizer Steven Seagal was an on-set 'bully,' former costar says
Mark Gray - Yesterday 3:18 PM
Russia sympathizer Steven Seagal was an on-set 'bully,' former costar says
Mark Gray - Yesterday 3:18 PM
>be free from tard jail
>speaker of the house.
Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin
Steven Seagal
Steven Seagal
Louis Chilton
Fri, April 15, 2022, 2:14 AM·4 min read
In this article:
Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin
President of Russia
Steven Seagal
Steven Seagal
American actor, martial artist, and film producer
The glimmer man: Steven Seagal poses with two watermelons after being granted Serbian citizenship in 2016 (AFP via Getty Images)
The glimmer man: Steven Seagal poses with two watermelons after being granted Serbian citizenship in 2016 (AFP via Getty Images)
It’s never been easier to ignore Steven Seagal. The martial arts star isn’t exactly a ubiquitous presence on the late-night talk show circuit. The action hits of his heyday don’t festoon the banners at the top of Netflix. Whole generations of kids will have now reached adulthood without once hearing the words, “Hey, how about we go check out that new Steven Seagal movie?”
Seagal has continued making films, mostly direct-to-video, though the shine of early Nineties thrillers like Hard to Kill and Under Siege faded long ago to nothingness. Over the past three decades, Seagal has faced multiple accusations of sexual harassment and sexual assault (all of which he has denied). This has probably contributed to his drastic tumble away from the Hollywood mainstream, but it’s not the only factor. Even during his pomp, Seagal was largely known as a peddler of high-octane schlock – an all-action martial arts man whose ability to deliver any kind of dialogue convincingly was rather beside the point. Over the past few years, Seagal’s film work has migrated to obscure streaming productions (and the 2017 Chinese film China Salesman, which also starred Mike Tyson). But he’s found a new means of holding people’s attention: as one of Hollywood’s few vocal cheerleaders for Russia.
Back in 2018, Vladimir Putin anointed Seagal as a special envoy for Russia to improve ties with the US. Seagal, who has been a Russian citizen since 2016, has made headlines in recent months for his brash statements on the war in Ukraine (a country he was been banned from entering in 2017, after being deemed a “threat to national security”). On Sunday (10 April), the actor spoke at a 70th birthday dinner held in his honour at a Moscow restaurant, which was also attended by a number of prominent Putin allies (including Russian state TV host Vladimir Soleviev, described by The Guardian as “one of the country’s most notorious propagandists” and Russian journalist Margarita Simonyan, both of whom have been placed on an EU sanctions list). Speaking to the crowd, he told them: “I love all of you and we stand together, through thick and through thin.”
That Seagal would harbour such sentiments shouldn’t come as a shock: he has previously described Putin as “one of the greatest world leaders, if not the greatest world leader, alive today”.
> I am sickened by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the gigantic humanitarian crisis it continues to create
>something wonderful