[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
01.09.2022 - 18:59 / perezhilton.com
Armie Hammer‘s aunt is speaking out about the forthcoming doc focused on the famous and disgraced actor’s family life and controversial background.
Of course, House of Hammer premieres on Friday on Discovery+, with all three parts set to be made available at once on the streaming network. Now, with the shocking doc on the doorstep, Casey Hammer spoke with the media about the star’s unsettling and shocking relationships with women and his family history.
Related: Robert Downey Jr. Paid For Armie Hammer’s Rehab After Rape Accusation?!
Speaking to ET about the documentary’s focus on the disturbing history of the Hammer clan, Casey said:
As we’ve been reporting, the docuseries covers quite a bit, including cannibalism accusations levied against the embattled star of the silver screen.
Per the series’ trailer, one of the women featured in the doc, Courtney Vucekovich, speaks candidly on screen about how “all was perfect” at the start with Armie, before he allegedly “pushes your boundaries a little bit” over time. Casey felt for Courtney and the other women allegedly impacted by the Call Me By Your Name actor. The star’s aunt told the outlet:
The doc’s focus also centers on the backstory of Armie’s family, including the actor’s high-profile businessman father Michael Armand Hammer and his late great-grandfather, petroleum biz tycoon Armand Hammer.
Armie’s controversies factor in too, though. Casey — who served as a consultant on the doc — explained how some of those issues worked to create a rift among members of the fam over the years:
Related: About That Rumor Armie Hammer Is Working At A Timeshare In The Cayman Islands…
She went on about the cannibalism accusations and misconduct claims recently levied against the Social
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
An image of a bite mark, allegedly left by Armie Hammer, has been replaced in the "House of Hammer" docuseries after the image's validity was questioned by viewers, Fox News Digital confirmed. The docuseries, which has already debuted on Discovery+, details sexual abuse allegations Hammer has faced since 2021. Courtney Vucekovich, one of Hammer’s former partners, shared the image with the network, assuming it was a picture of her body.
Armie Hammer docuseries about the sexual abuse allegations against him is making a change following “new information.”“House of Hammer” will be removing an image of a bite mark that one of Hammer’s exes believed to be a photo of her own body — but is reportedly a picture of a bite mark tattoo taken from Pinterest.Courtney Vucekovich — one of Hammer’s former partners — accused him of improper sexual behavior and participated in an on-camera interview for the Discovery+ docuseries, where she alleged love-bombing, coercion and abuse.“He bites really hard,” Vucekovich claimed.She said that Hammer, 36, allegedly coerced her into multiple BDSM situations that made her feel unsafe, including rope bondage and biting. “He tells you to wear them like a badge of honor,” she claimed. “Almost like he convinced me that I’m lucky to have it.
Armie Hammer’s alleged abuse have said they will make one change to it, following its release last week. Production house Talos Films will reportedly remove the photograph of an alleged bite mark that Hammer’s ex-girlfriend Courtney Vucekovich believed was of her own body, after viewers raised questions over its authenticity.
Armie Hammer is keeping his head down amid the storm.A source tells ET, «Armie kept it low key this past weekend after the release of the podcast, which levels several shocking allegations against the Hammer family.»The source says that Hammer and his estranged wife, Elizabeth Chambers — who split in 2020 amid the litany of high-profile allegations against the actor -- are «still coparenting really well.»«Nothing has changed between them in terms of that since the docuseries came out,» the source adds. «Their priorities are still taking care of their children and making sure their kids feel secure.
Elizabeth Wagmeister Senior Correspondent “House of Hammer,” a new Discovery+ docuseries about the sexual abuse allegations against Armie Hammer, is making a change following its release, removing an on-screen image of a bite mark that one of the actor’s exes believed to be a photo of her own body. Turns out, the image in question appears to be a bite mark tattoo from Pinterest. In “House of Hammer,” Courtney Vucekovich — one of Hammer’s former partners, who has accused him of improper sexual behavior — discusses the love-bombing, coercion and abuse she alleges to have endured during her relationship with the actor. In an on-camera interview, she says the actor convinced her into BDSM situations that did not make her feel safe, including rope bondage and biting.
Armie Hammer is a subject of scrutiny in the new Discovery+ docu-series House of Hammer and there’s one moment in the series that viewers noticed might not be accurate.
Armie Hammer is living in one of Robert Downey Jr's houses. The 36-year-old actor had a spell in in rehab back in 2021 after struggling to overcome alcoholism and is now said to be staying in a house owned by his fellow Hollywood star Robert,57, as he continues to conquer sobriety. A source told PageSix: "He is shacking up in one of Robert's extra houses.
Elizabeth Wagmeister Senior Correspondent “This documentary contains graphic descriptions of violence, sexual abuse and coercive control.” That’s the warning viewers see when they first tune into “House of Hammer,” a new three-part docuseries from Discovery+, which exposes details surrounding the sexual abuse allegations against Armie Hammer. In early 2021, an onslaught of unverified messages that “The Social Network” star had allegedly sent to women surfaced on social media after one of his exes began to anonymously post graphic messages in which Hammer allegedly texted, “I am 100% a cannibal” and “I want to eat you.” The messages snowballed and Hammer’s career went into freefall.
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
Armie Hammer‘s scandal is front and center in the new Discovery+ docu-series House of Hammer, which is now available on the streaming service.
told the LA Times on Friday that, when she was first approached by Hakami and Hobbs, she responded to them in writing, saying, “It is extremely inappropriate of you to exploit such a tragic, vulnerable time in many people’s lives, with no regard whatsoever for our healing process and privacy.”Despite her refusal and her letter, the docuseries includes photos of her Instagram account where she described her assault and footage from a 2021 press conference in which she tearfully said Hammer “violently raped” her for four hours in 2017. “The way they’ve been exploiting my trauma is disgusting,” she told the Times in Friday’s statement, comparing the lack of permission nearly as much of a violation as Hammer’s alleged abuses: “When I keep screaming ‘no’ and they keep going, saying they don’t need my permission, they remind me of Armie,” she said.Publicists for the series did not respond to TheWrap’s request for comment.Hammer’s attorney Andrew Brettler has previously denied Effie’s claims, saying that anything that transpired between her and the actor — “and every other sexual partner of his for that matter” — was “completely consensual, discussed and agreed upon in advance, and mutually participatory.”The case against Hammer began in early 2021 when Effie, who is the only woman who has publicly accused the actor of rape, began to share on Instagram her experience with him.
The Daily Beast, aunt Casey Hammer said that she was not shocked over the rape charges against him. Even the claims of the Call Me By Your Name star being a cannibal was not a shocker for her, according to the publication. Casey Hammer said that the actor was destined to be a ‘monster’ as abuse was a ‘way of life’ in their uber-rich family. She also alleged that as a child, she was abused by male members of the family. Casey hammer told the news website: Casey, who is the granddaughter of late oil tycoon Armand Hammer and the sister of Armie’s father, spoke out in public about Armie’s dark side since news of his disturbed behaviour started doing the rounds since January of 2021.
abuse allegations against Armie Hammer. If you leave out the fact that much of the scandal takes place via texts and Instagram DMs, it feels like the kind of story we might learn decades later, perhaps in a harrowing season of Karina Longworth’s “You Must Remember This” podcast. A rich and handsome movie star with a dark personal life? That’s most certainly not a new concept.
The darkest parts of an empire. The allegations against Armie Hammer are at the center of House of Hammer, an explosive new docuseries about the actor and his family.
Armie Hammer’s aunt is praising the women who are coming forward with shocking accusations about the fallen movie star. The 36-year-old and his family are the subjects of a Discovery+ docuseries titled "House of Hammer" premiering on Sept. 2.
Armie Hammer’s aunt “wasn’t shocked” by the rape and “cannibal” allegations against the actor. Casey Hammer, 62, also suggested the 36-year-old was doomed to become a “monster” as abuse was a “way of life” in his family. She made the claims in a new interview with The Daily Beast, alleging she was abused by her male relatives for years during childhood.
Anna Tingley A new docuseries about Armie Hammer arrives on Discovery+ Friday, promising to delve deep into the headline-making accusations leveled against the actor over the past year, in addition to his wealthy family’s dark past. The trailer for “House of Hammer,” which dropped earlier this month, includes clips of conversations with the actor’s ex-girlfriends Courtney Vucekovich and Julia Morrison, who provide screenshots of text conversations, voice memos and photos to back up their accounts of the alleged abuse they endured.
documentary premiering on Sept. 2, and she's hoping it instills some courage in people facing abusive situations in their own families while shining a light on the privileged lives of the wealthy.ET's Kevin Frazier recently spoke with Casey — the aunt of embattled actor Armie Hammer -- who also served as a consultant on the three-part documentary, and she opened up about her family, and why the series is so vital.«It's important to hold these people accountable now, even though most of them are dead, it's important that people of money and power and wealth don't get away with bad behavior anymore,» Casey says.