A German film starring Armie Hammer that was allegedly denied a certificate by the German ratings board for “inciting violence against immigrants” has secured worldwide distribution and an explosion in its viewing figures after a bizarre intervention by Elon Musk.
Citizen Vigilante, a thriller starring Hammer, and written and directed by Uwe Boll, was posted free on Musk’s account on X from Thursday to Sunday, resulting in a major boost to its marketing and commercial profile. The film was released in the US on 19 June by Quiver Distribution, which according to Variety, has now acquired worldwide rights. Musk also posted: “Citizen Vigilante 2 will be even better.”
In an interview with the Telegraph, Boll claimed that the film was denied a certificate by Germany’s ratings board, the FSK (Freiwillige Selbstkontrolle der Filmwirtschaft), saying that “it was a deliberate censorship decision”. He said: “I hired a lawyer to complain about it, but we lost in a six-two vote, as I was told that the film was inciting violence against migrants.”
Hammer plays an American businessman who conducts a campaign of vigilante violence against criminals in a non-specific European country. Boll says he was inspired by a case in Hamburg in 2016 in which three teenagers who participated in gang rape were given suspended sentences.
Musk’s intervention has resulted in the film acquiring cachet in the ongoing culture war, in which Musk has regularly supported far-right anti-immigrant activists, most recently after the knife attack in Belfast in June
Boll, who has regularly been called the “worst director of all time”, appeared this week on a film review podcast run by the leader of the UK white-nationalist group Patriotic Alternative, Mark Collett.
The director, who has made more than 30 feature films, told Collett that he was urgently trying to release the film in Britain and a distributor was waiting for a rating.
“We say it how it is. We are not sugarcoating around. We just say what a lot of people think and would not say in public. We are not only tired of this political bullshit about migration but this endless loop of movies with diversity riders,” he said.
Musk’s intervention has resulted in the film acquiring cachet in the ongoing culture war, in which Musk has regularly supported far-right anti-immigrant activists. Boll told Variety that Musk had contacted the makers of his podcast Uwe Boll Raw to request the film. “I didn’t really chat myself with him or talk to him. It was very quick, you know. I think this guy, I don’t know what he’s doing per day, but I think his attention went like fast, you know. So, I felt also if we don’t in a way agree to do it, he would’ve just moved on.”
Before Musk’s interest in the film, Citizen Vigilante had already courted controversy by casting Hammer in the lead, as the actor attempted to make a comeback after accusations in 2021 of rape and physically abusive behaviour. Authorities in LA county declined to pursue sexual assault charges against Hammer, and he denied claims that he is a cannibal and that he sexually abused a number of women in interviews with Tyler Ramsay and Louis Theroux.
In a damning review, Variety critic Todd Gilchrist called the film “a violent, incoherent, morally bankrupt slice of exploitation” and “so astonishingly bad, it almost feels like [Boll] is deliberately sabotaging his star”.
Boll was also forced to change the film’s original title from The Dark Knight after what he claimed was “a friendly conversation” with Batman studio Warner Bros.