Actress Rosanna Arquette has issued a forceful rebuttal to Harvey Weinstein‘s recent prison interview, declaring “the rapes happened” and underscoring that survivor accounts are not exaggerated clubs but legally substantiated realities—a stance that reignites the #MeToo movement’s core fight for accountability.
Rosanna Arquette is pushing back against Harvey Weinstein‘s continued denials from prison with a blunt, evidence-based statement that leaves no room for ambiguity: “The assaults happened. The rapes happened.” Her response directly addresses a recent interview published by The Hollywood Reporter, where the disgraced producer not only denied all sexual assault allegations but also accused survivors—including Arquette, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Angelina Jolie—of exaggeration and seeking “to be part of the club.”
Weinstein’s interview, conducted on Riker’s Island where he is incarcerated for rape and sexual assault, represents a persistent effort to rewrite history. He claims survivors “just exaggerated” and “destroyed” him, a narrative that directly contradicts the findings of criminal courts and investigative journalism. This is not merely a personal attack; it is a strategic attempt to undermine the credibility of every survivor who came forward, leveraging his remaining platform to spread falsehoods even behind bars.
Arquette’s history with Weinstein dates back to the 2017 New Yorker bombshell investigation that first exposed his pattern of abuse. She alleged that after rejecting his sexual advances, her acting career suffered significantly. While she did secure a role in Pulp Fiction, she notes it was exceptionally small, and she was paid scale without back-end participation—unlike other cast members who received profit shares. The film grossed over $213 million against an $8 million budget, a fact that highlights the economic disparities Weinstein engineered.
In her full statement, Arquette methodically dismantles Weinstein’s claims. She emphasizes that the assaults were “substantiated by investigative journalists at different legacy news outlets” and “brought to courtrooms, where Harvey Weinstein was given the full benefits of due process.” Although his New York conviction was overturned on procedural grounds, a retrial found him guilty of one count of sexual assault, and his California conviction remains intact. She