Will Smith back on the screens less than a year after the scandal caused by the slap he had given to Chris Rock at the Oscars.
Apple announced on Monday that its new movie "Emancipation" will be released in December, starring the actor.
Hollywood professionals were instead betting on a postponement of this historic feature film on slavery, because of the scent of sulfur that emanates from Will Smith since his slap last March on Oscar host, comedian Chris Rock .
A slippage widely condemned, which earned him 10 years of exclusion from the ceremony.
Despite the controversy, Apple will launch “Emancipation” in American theaters on December 2, before a release on its Apple TV+ streaming platform the following week.
This calendar allows the group to propose the film for the next Oscars, just after becoming the first streaming platform to be awarded the statuette for best film at the last ceremony, thanks to its feature film “CODA”.
Will Smith has kept a low profile since last year's Oscars, when he won best actor for his performance in 'The Williams Method', minutes after slapping Chris Rock, who had derided his wife's alopecia, Jada Pinkett Smith.
Nothing stands in the way of it being nominated for the Oscars
The former "Prince of Bel-Air" publicly apologized shortly after the incident.
In July, he also posted a video on social networks, proposing a meeting with the comedian.
The 54-year-old actor has voluntarily resigned from the Academy of Oscars.
This banned him from ceremonies for 10 years, but nothing prevents him from being nominated for the competition.
His Best Actor Oscar was not taken away from him despite the scandal.
In "Emancipation", he portrays a runaway slave in the Louisiana swamps, with the hope of reaching the North of the country, synonymous with freedom for African-Americans in the United States of the 19th century.
The feature film was directed by Antoine Fuqua, whose film "Training Day" (2001) had enabled Denzel Washington to win the Oscar for best actor.
"Emancipation" was originally to be shot in Georgia, but the production was relocated to Louisiana after the adoption of a controversial law by this state of the American South, which aimed, according to several NGOs, to discourage the vote of African-Americans.