Families who lost relatives in the 2005 London bomb attacks are appealing to cinemas not to show a British comedy about four aspiring suicide bombers.
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Graham Foulkes, who also lost his son in the bombings, said he and other relatives were appealing to cinemas not to show the British-funded film.
He acknowledged that humour had a part when it came to examining serious issues but said for his family, and others like them, the tragedy was still too raw.
Nobody is forcing him to go and see it, and he agrees that humour is a valid approach, but his answer is still to try to get cinemas to boycott it.
*headdesk*
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