(March 13) -- Scientology's image has taken a flurry of hits in the past six months. First, a high-profile member -- Oscar winning "Crash" director Paul Haggis -- defected. Then former employees alleged they were defrauded and treated like slaves by the church. And now Tom Cruise and Co. face a new threat from across the Atlantic.
Later this month, German television is set to broadcast a 90-minute movie that portrays L. Ron Hubbard's 50-year-old church as corrupt, divisive and totalitarian. Unsurprisingly, Scientologists want it banned.
"Until Nothing Remains" ("Bis nichts mehr bleibt") -- due to air in a prime-time slot March 31 -- tells the story of a family torn apart by its involvement with Scientology. It's loosely based on the true-life story of ex-member Heiner von Rönn. During his 10 years with the organization, he says he handed the church tens of thousands of dollars for vitamins and "auditing" sessions. But von Rönn paid an even higher price when he quit the movement in the mid '90s: He lost contact with his wife and two children, who kept the faith.
German Scientology bosses say public TV network ARD has deliberately set out to damage the church and insult its followers with the movie. At a preview of "Until Nothing Remains" in the northern city of Hamburg, church members handed out leaflets accusing the broadcaster of attempting "to create a mood of intolerance and discrimination against a religious community."
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The crew told Der Spiegel magazine that they believe they were tailed by a Scientology spokesman during filming. Notebooks were also stolen form the trunk of the director's car. Soon after that theft, he was contacted by an anonymous caller who declared, "We know you're making a movie about Scientology," and then hung up. And the broadcaster says it was inundated with calls and e-mails from the organization. The church has denied any involvement."We're not dealing here with a religion, rather with an organization that has completely different motives," ARD's program director Volker Herres said at the film screening. "Scientology is about power, business and building up a network. Its lessons are pure science fiction. It's no religion, no church, no sect."
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