Master Sgt. Jeffrey Sarver is seen during a news conference
in Southfield. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)
An Army bomb disposal expert who served in the Iraq war
is suing the makers of "The Hurt Locker," claiming the
Oscar-nominated film's lead character is based on him and that
they cheated him out of "financial participation in the film".
Attorney Geoffrey Fieger said at a news conference at his
Southfield office that he filed the multimillion-dollar
lawsuit in New Jersey federal court on behalf of Master Sgt.
Jeffrey Sarver.
Sarver, of Clarksville, Tennessee, claims screenwriter Mark
Boal was embedded in his three-person unit and that the
information he gathered was used in the film, Fieger said.
The film is nominated for nine Academy Awards, including best
original screenplay.
Sarver says Will James, the film's main character (portrayed
by Oscar nominee Jeremy Renner), is based on him and that
James' call signal, "Blaster One," was uniquely his during
his tours of duty, Fieger said. Sarver also says he coined
the phrase "The Hurt Locker."
Fieger says Boal's embedded reporting - over 30 days in 2004
- led to an article the following year in Playboy
magazine about Sarver, and that the story later was adapted
by Boal for "The Hurt Locker" screenplay.
"If you do take the time to read (the Playboy article) and if
you then go and view 'The Hurt Locker,' you will see - and
there will be no question in your mind - that 'Blaster One,'
Sgt. Sarver, is the character in 'The Hurt Locker' called
Will James," Fieger said. "The caveat in the movie that the
movie is fictional and all the characters portrayed in the
movie are fictional is a fictional statement in and of
itself."
The movie's US distributor, Summit Entertainment, issued a
statement saying it hopes "for a quick resolution to the
claims made by Master Sgt. Sarver."
"The film is a story about heroes depicting a fictional
account of what brave men and women do on the battlefield,"
the company said. "We have no doubt that Master Sgt. Sarver
served his country with honour and commitment risking his
life for a greater good, but we distributed the film based on
a fictional screenplay written by Mark Boal."
Boal did not immediately respond to phone and e-mail messages
seeking comment left with Creative Artists Agency, the Los
Angeles company that represents him.
Fieger said he filed the lawsuit - which names as defendants
Boal and Oscar-nominated director Kathryn Bigelow, among
others - after voting for the Academy Awards had concluded.
Fieger claims Boal was consulting with Bigelow while he was
embedded.
Fieger said greed was the reason Sarver wasn't permitted to
participate in the film or be recognized for his role as the
inspiration for the main character.
Now, he said: "They're gonna owe him a whole lot of money and
recognition."
Sarver said he was never offered a role in the making of the
movie.
"I could have helped out a little bit," he said at the news
conference. "But they chose not to (involve me)."
"(I'm feeling) just a little bit hurt, a little bit felt left
out," Sarver said. "Just hoping that Mr. Fieger can make
things right."
It's been a rough start to the week for "The Hurt Locker."
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences earlier
penalised one of the film's producers because of e-mails he
sent urging academy members to vote for his movie.
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