With Hacksaw Ridge, Mel Gibson returns to the Hollywood maelstrom
Ten years after the drink-driving arrest that prompted an anti-Semitic meltdown, Gibson is back with a movie about a conscientious objector who joins the army in the second world war

One of the most sought-after names in Hollywood at the height of his career, Oscar-winning Mel Gibson has been a pariah in the filmmaking community for a decade.
Ostracised by Hollywood after an anti-Semitic tirade captured on tape during a 2006 drunk-driving arrest, the actor-director has since had to make do with a handful of parts in obscure or poorly received films.
It is a far cry from the adulation he enjoyed as the Mad Max and Lethal Weapon films established him as a star, before he went on to win Academy Awards for producing and directing 1996’s Braveheart .
As he unveils his new faith-based second world war drama Hacksaw Ridge in the US this weekend, the 60-year-old devout Catholic will be hoping cinema-goers have shorter memories than movie executives.
The film tells the true story of Desmond Doss, played by Andrew Garfield, who enlists and is determined to save lives on the front line as a medic, but refuses to carry a gun on moral grounds.