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“Colombiana” gets the shaft, before it premieres (and before anyone’s seen it)

You can’t say that Zoë Saldaña hasn’t had her share of good luck. Besides being stunningly beautiful and supremely talented, the 33-year-old actress has been part of some of the biggest and most successful films of the last few years, including Avatar and the remake of Star Trek, and there is plenty yet to come. But her new headliner, the action-thriller Colombiana, hasn’t shared in a lot of that luck…and that’s really not fair.

The last few weeks there has been a flurry of political protest over the movie. Well, actually, not over the movie, but over the title. An activist group called ProColombia has made a lot of headlines condemning the movie and Sony Pictures in general for using the name of the country in the title, and implying therefore that all of Colombia is a vicious hellhole where children are forced to watch their parents murdered in front of them, thereby turning them into cold-hearted yet beautiful assassins when they grow up (oops, we gave it away: the premise of the film.)

The crazy thing is, nobody has seen the movie. For whatever reason (and yes, it is suspicious) Sony has chosen not to make Colombiana available to reviewers before its release this Friday. That could be because it’s just so darn good, or has some sort of twist ending, that pre-release would blunt its effect. It could also be that, despite producer Luc Besson’s best efforts, that it really isn’t very good, and they’re counting on Saldaña’s star power to drive the first-weekend box office sight unseen…before word gets around that it’s a turkey. (It’s also a little ironic that both Colombiana and Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark, both premiering on the same day, are more closely associated with their producers than their directors. Such is the nature of star power in Hollywood, 2011.)

Either way, all the publicity of late hasn’t been about Saldaña, Besson or a thriller that seems to owe more to Besson’s Taken than it does to anti-South American diatribes like Proof of Life or Missing. It’s based entirely on an admittedly powerful trailer and the title alone, which does a pretty major disservice to all the folks who worked hard on this film, regardless of the final outcome.

It’s also not as if cities or even countries have had to deal with bad reps transmitted by film titles before, and yet survived to tell the tale. Just ask the folks in Philadelphia (obviously filled with nothing but violent anti-homophobes who hate Tom Hanks) Russia (where From Russian with Love showed the entire countryside is populated by high-tech haters of America), Fort Apache, the Bronx, or even Amityville, New York (need we say more)? Whether this is just a bid for publicity by a new and opportunistic–not to mention over-sensitive–political group or a sincere expression of concern about racism and violence in film…it certainly is premature. Maybe everyone should wait long enough to actually see the movie before passing judgment.

That’s certainly what Saldaña thinks. In a recent interview with realbollywood.com, she said, “I’m a little worried about all this, but it really wasn’t our intention. People have to go see the movie because it’s an action story with a lot of heart, and above all because the leading character is a Latina.” Check out the complete interview here.

We couldn’t have said it better ourselves.