Brendan Fraser isn’t done fighting the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.

The organization investigated Fraser’s claims that former HFPA president Philip Berk groped him in 2003, but ultimately said in a proposed statement — which was later shut down by Fraser — that Berk’s alleged actions should’ve been taken as a “joke,” the actor said.

“Although it was concluded that Mr. Berk inappropriately touched Mr. Fraser, the evidence supports that it was intended to be taken as a joke and not as a sexual advance,” the proposed statement from the organization read, as Fraser shared with GQ.

“I don’t get the joke,” Fraser told GQ. “I’m the only one who would know where I was touched on my body.”

In February, Fraser recalled the alleged incident to the magazine, saying Berk’s “left hand reaches around, grabs my ass cheek, and one of his fingers touches me in the taint. And he starts moving it around.”

Berk denied Fraser’s claims, calling them a “total fabrication.”

The proposed statement from the HFPA also said the organization “looked forward” to continuing to work with the “Bedazzled” actor, he said. Fraser refused to sign it.

“What I said to them was, ‘Show me the investigator’s report, and then I’ll know what I’m signing off on.’”

The HFPA declined, according to Fraser, who said all he saw was a summary of the group’s findings, citing witness-confidentiality concerns.

“They’re kind of behaving like wolves in sheep’s clothing about it, saying, ‘Oh, we want him to heal.’ Well, the first step in that direction would be: What am I healing from? Can I please see this report? What is it? They commissioned an investigation. They received their report. And they’re not giving any details about it, and they’re not giving up the report itself.”

When asked if he faced disciplinary action, Berk told GQ, “None at all.”

“The HFPA continues to stand firmly against sexual harassment. As such, we have always taken Brendan Fraser’s allegations very seriously—both when he originally spoke out in 2003 and now again 15 years later,” the official statement of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association/HFPA sent to Page Six on Wednesday reads. “Back then, after an initial inquiry, we provided Mr. Fraser with the exact redress he sought—an acknowledgment of the transgression and an apology. Mr. Fraser continued to attend HFPA events including the Golden Globes.

“When Mr. Fraser raised the allegations again this year in the March issue of GQ, adding several previously unknown details, we conducted an internal review and then took it upon ourselves to commission an independent investigation into the matter to ensure impartiality,” the statement continued. “We’ve shared the results of that investigation with Mr. Fraser, and again apologized, but also conveyed our need to abide by the investigation’s finding that the exchange was not an intended sexual advance. We want to reiterate that the HFPA understands today—as it did 15 years ago—that what Mr. Fraser experienced was inappropriate.”

Fraser, who now appears in the TV series “Trust,” ultimately wants to move forward and help others.

“I want to find some way to make medicine out of this poison, which is not specific just to this enterprise,” Fraser shared. “There’s a system in place that’s unwritten. If you abide by it, you will be rewarded. If you don’t, you won’t be.

“But outside of that, I want to end this episode, this chapter, in my own life and career and move on, just as I’m hopeful that others will be able to in years to come.”