Amazon said Sunday that its Prime Video streaming service will release a “behind-the-scenes” documentary about Melania Trump’s life.
The film will head to movie theaters and stream on Amazon Prime in the second half of this year, the company said in a statement. Trump will be an executive producer of the documentary, which started filming in December, the month after her husband, Donald Trump, won the presidential election.
Amazon said it was “excited to share this truly unique story.”
The company and its founder, Jeff Bezos, who also owns The Washington Post, had a rocky relationship with Trump during Trump’s first presidential term. But in recent months, Amazon and Bezos have taken steps to repair it. The tech giant said last month that it would donate $1 million to the president-elect’s inaugural fund, joining Meta and executives of some other Silicon Valley companies in writing checks to the inaugural committee. Bezos has said he is “very optimistic” about Trump’s new term in office and is eager to work with his administration on reducing regulation.
During his first presidential term, Trump criticized Bezos because of his newspaper’s political coverage and questioned whether the U.S. Postal Service was charging Amazon too little for shipping. Amazon, in turn, accused Trump of using “improper pressure” on the Pentagon to deny the company a cloud-computing contract.
Amazon now appears to be eager to turn the page.
In October, the Post said it would stop endorsing presidential candidates, a decision made by Bezos, and did not publish an endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris that had already been drafted. Bezos defended his decision, saying newspaper endorsements “create a perception of bias.”
Last week, Ann Telnaes, a Post cartoonist, said she was resigning after the paper’s opinion section rejected a cartoon that showed Bezos and three other technology executives bending the knee to a statue of Trump while offering the president-elect bags of money. David Shipley, the Post’s opinion editor, said that the cartoon was rejected because the section had published a column on the same subject and had already scheduled another one for publication. He said he had asked Telnaes to rescind her resignation, saying, “The only bias was against repetition.”
Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the efforts by the company and Bezos to forge closer ties with Trump. The Trump transition team also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Melania Trump has recently shown more willingness to share details about her life with the public. Last year, she published a memoir that described her career as a model, her marriage to Trump and her time in the White House. It became a No. 1 New York Times bestseller. Her role as executive producer of the documentary suggests that she will have some influence over how it depicts her life.
Brett Ratner, a director and producer behind movies like “Rush Hour” and “The Revenant,” will direct the documentary. Ratner has kept a lower profile in recent years after questions were raised about his behavior. In 2011, he resigned as co-producer of the Oscars broadcast after he used an anti-gay slur at a public event. In 2017, Ratner was accused of sexual misconduct by six women in an article published by the Los Angeles Times, claims that he denied.
Amazon, which will have exclusive rights to the movie about Melania Trump, said that it will reveal more details on the project as filming progresses and it finalizes release plans.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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