“I deeply regret working with Woody Allen on Wonder Wheel,” Krumholtz wrote on Friday.

“It’s one of my most heartbreaking mistakes.

We can no longer let these men represent us in entertainment, politics, or any other realm.

David-Krumholtz-Woody-Allen

Credit: Jim Spellman/WireImage; Vera Anderson/WireImage

They are beneath real men.”

“He was a hero,” Krumholtz tweeted of Allen.

“So i was fascinated and i didn’t want to believe it.

I’m sorry, Bob.

But I’ve chosen to prioritize Dylan’s account over all others.

Coupled with the @washingtonpost story and his eagerness to produce yet another tone deaf film.”

It seems Krumholtz was referring to the article, “I read decades of Woody Allen’s private notes.

He’s obsessed with teenage girls.

(Weinstein has denied any instance of non-consensual sex.)

“He then sexually assaulted me.

The investigators concluded unambiguously that Dylan Farrow was not sexually abused.

No charges were ever filed, and the reason is simple: because Woody Allen is innocent.”

Allen calledhis 2014 essay inThe New York Timesto be his “final word on this entire matter.”

He wrote, “Of course, I did not molest Dylan.

“She said in 2014, “My memories are mine.

She was distraught when I told her.

When I came forward with my story she was hoping against hope that I had made it up.

She said that Dad said he didn’t do anything.

And I said, ‘He’s lying.'”

[The Weinstein allegations] actually happened right after I had started [on the movie].

They popped up in the midst of it.

And that’s something, yes, I had to face and discuss.

I stepped back and thought, ‘Wow, the universe works in interesting ways.'”

Winslet called it “a difficult discussion” during press interviews forWonder Wheel.

The Oscar winner previously toldThe New York Times, “Of course one thinks about it.

Having thought it all through, you put it to one side and just work with the person.”