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A major film festival is premiering a movie from the man who jumpstarted the anti-vaccine hysteria, and people are furious

Mar 25, 2016, 00:25 IST

Tribeca Film Festival

There's something strange about Tribeca Film Festival's 2016 documentary line-up.

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It includes a film produced by the man who's been linked to jumpstarting mass, unfounded hysteria over vaccinations.

That man is Andrew Wakefield, and in 1998 he infamously - and wrongfully - presented a paper claiming that a combination vaccine for measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR), could be linked to the onset of autism.

In the fallout from his error-riddled presentation, his so-called findings were discredited in close to every way possible: The paper was retracted. Wakefield was stripped of his medical license, found guilty of "abusing a position of trust as a medical practitioner," and found guilty of "dishonesty" in his studies.

You wouldn't know it from looking at Tribeca's website, however. Here's how they describe the film, called "Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe":

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As for its producer, Andrew Wakefield, all Tribeca says about him is this:

Not surprisingly, the festival is already getting a lot of heat for its choice to include the movie in its line-up.

Documentarian Penny Lane, who received the Tribeca Film Institute's Documentary Fund (not the same entity as the Festival) in 2012 and recently produced a film about a doctor who "built an empire with his goat-testicle impotence cure," wrote a scathing public letter to Tribeca on Facebook about its choice.

"Dear Tribeca Film Festival, I love you but you made a very serious mistake," Lane wrote. She adds: "Your online film festival guide helpfully suggests if I'm interested in Vaxxed, I might also be interested in the category of 'documentaries.' Well, as a documentary filmmaker who spent eight years making a film about a quack: yes ... I am interested in your choice to screen Vaxxed and what it means for documentaries."

Who is Andrew Wakefield and how did his infamous vaccine study go so viral?

Andrew Wakefield stands with his wife, Carmel Wakefield, as he speaks to the media after a hearing at the General Medical Council (GMC) in London on Jan. 28, 2010. The GMC ruled that Wakefield acted unethically in doing his research into a link between vaccinations and autism.SHAUN CURRY/AFP/Getty Images

Back in 1998, when Wakefield was still working as a physician (he's since been stripped of his medical license, found guilty of "abusing a position of trust as a medical practitioner," and found guilty of "dishonesty" in his studies), London's Royal Free Hospital held a press conference to publicize a paper he'd written (which has since been retracted) for the esteemed medical journal The Lancet.

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The paper was about vaccinations.

In it, Wakefield claimed that one vaccination in particular, a popular innoculation for measles-mumps-rubella (MMR), could be linked to the onset of autism, a serious neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by impaired social interaction.

In the weeks and months to come, scientists, doctors, and public health experts jumped to point out the multiple, flagrant weaknesses in his paper.

But the damage was done. And its after-effects continue to be felt today, from vaccination rates that declined in the wake of Wakefield's publicity to new outbreaks of measles and other illnesses for which perfectly safe innoculations exist.

The new film, whose official synopsis, according to Indiewire, doesn't even allude to any of the above, is set to premier Sunday, April 24, at the Tribeca Film Festival.

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According to the Tribeca Film Festival website, the documentary, "features revealing and emotional interviews with pharmaceutical insiders, doctors, politicians, parents, and one whistleblower to understand what's behind the skyrocketing increase of autism diagnoses today."

Here's the statement Tribeca provided to The Cut on its decision to include the film:

"Tribeca, as most film festivals, are about dialogue and discussion. Over the years we have presented many films from opposing sides of an issue. We are a forum, not a judge."

Business Insider has reached out to Tribeca Film Festival and will update this post as needed.

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