'9/11
attacks made up, '
says French best actress Oscar-winner
By PETER ALLEN
Last
updated at 01:08am on 2nd March 2008
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/showbiz/showbiznews.html?in_article_id=523729&in_page_id=1773

Oscar-winner Marion Cotillard has
accused America of fabricating the 9/11 attacks
Actress Marion
Cotillard sparked a political row yesterday after
accusing America of fabricating the 9/11 attacks.
The
32-year-old French actress, who received an Oscar last
month for her performance as singer Edith Piaf in La Vie
En Rose, openly questioned the truth behind the
terrorist atrocity in an interview broadcast on a French
website.
"I think we're
lied to about a number of things," Cotillard said,
singling out the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center
as an example of the US making up horror stories for
political ends.
Referring to the
two passenger jets being flown into the Twin Towers,
Cotillard said:
"We see other
towers of the same kind being hit by planes. Are they
burned? They [sic] was a tower, I believe it was in
Spain, which burnt for 24 hours. It never collapsed.
None of these towers collapsed. And there [in New York],
in a few minutes, the whole thing collapsed."
She added that
the towers, planned in the early Sixties, were an
outdated "money-sucker" that would have cost more to
modernise than to rebuild altogether, which is why they
were destroyed.
She said: "It
was a money-sucker because they were finished, it seems
to me, by 1973, and to re-cable all that, to bring
up-to-date all the technology and everything, it was a
lot more expensive, that work, than destroying them."
Cotillard's
stardom and increased earning power looked assured
following her Oscar win.
But after her
outburst, in which she also queried the 1969 Moon
landings, a successful future in Hollywood appears to be
in jeopardy.
She said: "Did a
man really walk on the Moon? I saw plenty of
documentaries on it, and I really wondered. And in any
case I don't believe all they tell me, that's for sure."
Cotillard,
who was born and brought up in Paris, made the comments
on Paris Première - Paris Dernière, a programme
broadcast a year ago.
Stars in
their eyes: Elton John and partner David Furnish
cosy up to the hottest new actress in Hollywood
Celebration:
Marion celebrated her win with Hollywood's A-listers
- including Sharon Stone - at Elton John's party in
Hollywood
At the time her
remarks were largely ignored, but their appearance
yesterday on the French magazine website Marianne2 comes
at a time when Cotillard's profile is sky-high.
She is shortly
due to fly to Chicago to star alongside Johnny Depp in
Public Enemies, a gangster movie expected to be her
first big money-spinner.
Cotillard's film
career began in Luc Besson's 1998 film Taxi - a huge hit
in France but less so around the world.
She is slowly
becoming a household name in France, in a list most
recently topped by her close friend Audrey Tautou and
previously by women such as Catherine Deneuve and
Brigitte Bardot.

'I think we're lied
to about a number of things' Cotillard said, singling
out the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center as an
example of the US making up horror stories for political
ends
But Cotillard,
who lives with actor and director Guillaume Canet,
frequently tells interviewers she has no interest in
money or prestige.
Denying that she
had any kind of "Anglo-Saxon ambition", she said she
prefers to "choose roles which suit me".
Despite her
low-key image, Cotillard is an environmental activist
who once worked as a spokesman for Greenpeace.
News of her
anti-Americanism comes as Franco-American relations
appear to be thawing, following Paris's refusal to show
support for the invasion of Iraq.
President Nicolas Sarkozy insists he is pro-American,
even supporting so-called "Anglo-Saxon" economic reforms.
Article Reproduced From "Daily
Mail":
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