Director Brett Ratner Immigrates to Israel
The Rush Hour filmmaker’s Hollywood career has stalled since he was accused in October 2017 of sexual misconduct by multiple women.

Rush Hour director Brett Ratner has reportedly immigrated to Israel.
On Tuesday, The Jerusalem Post‘s Walla reported that Ratner posted to his Instagram Story a clip of an Israeli immigration certificate and national insurance documents. He captioned the clip in Hebrew, “Brett Shai Ratner.”
The X-Men: The Last Stand filmmaker is friendly with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and last month met with him in New York during Netanyahu’s visit to the United Nations for the 78th General Assembly. Israeli media reports that Ratner and Harvard Law School professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz were Netanyahu’s guests during his speech to the General Assembly.
On his Instagram, the filmmaker posted a picture of himself with Netanyahu, Sara Netanyahu and Dershowitz.
The scandal-plagued director’s Hollywood career has stalled since he was accused in October 2017, during the Me Too movement, of sexual misconduct by multiple women.
In a LA Times report, six women, including actresses Olivia Munn and Natasha Henstridge, made allegations against Ratner.
Henstridge, who starred in the Species trilogy, said that Ratner forced her to perform oral sex on him in his New York apartment in the 1990s. Munn said that Ratner masturbated in front of her when she visited him on the set of the 2004 movie After the Sunset. Ratner denied the allegations.
In April 2018, Warner severed ties with Ratner, choosing not to renew its deal with his RatPac-Dune Entertainment, which had $450 million slate financing facility that covered costs on some of the studio’s biggest projects.
In June 2018, Ratner lobbied to direct a fourth installment of the Rush Hour franchise, but was rebuffed by Warner Bros.
The filmmaker’s name also popped up in the investigation of Warner exec Kevin Tsujihara’s relationship with British actress Charlotte Kirk.
Ratner attempted comeback in 2021, helming a biopic of fraudulent R&B duo Milli Vanili. But the project failed due to Time’s Up statement that “there should be no comeback” for Ratner.