MANILA
--
In the scruffy second-floor office of an abandoned government building,
Gen. Manuel Noriega--well, at least it looks like Noriega--stared out
the window, and his eyes went wide. In the yard below, on the rooftop
across the way, in a truck and on two armored personnel carriers were 30
soldiers in Panamanian uniforms, their rifles trained squarely on the
swarthy, scar-faced general.
"Here he is! Look at the monster!" yelled the rebel officer
who had pushed Noriega to the window with his M-16 rifle, and from the
courtyard came a chorus of "Kill him! Kill him!" The general
dropped to his knees. "Please," he said. "Just give me a
minute. Alone. I need to pray."
A light rain fell outside and in the office where Noriega knelt, head
bowed; the heat hung heavy. Everyone was sweating. Roger Spottiswoode,
the director, mopped his brow and peered at the video monitor over the
top of his half-frame glasses. "Cut," he said. "That
looked good. But I need some more soldiers up there in the guard tower,
and someone has to hold up that traffic outside the gate. And please.
Quiet. I simply can't think if 20 of you are talking at once."
And so it was, here in the Philippines, on the 28th day of a five-week
shoot, in the second hour of another 18-hour day, that Gen.
Noriega--a.k.a. award-winning actor Bob Hoskins, whose
resemblance to the deposed general is nothing short of eerie--was, in a
manner of speaking, reborn to confront another crisis that would test
his tenet of being God's chosen favorite.
Noriega, 65--the real Noriega--wasn't, of course, around to offer
Spottiswoode any advice whether this is how it all happened. The
"unrepentant criminal," as President George Bush called him,
is languishing in a prison outside Miami, serving a 40-year sentence for
racketeering, conspiracy and cocaine-smuggling and, one supposes, still
smarting over the 1989 U.S. invasion of Panama that ended his
dictatorship and brought him to trial in the United States.
Before his conviction in 1992, Noriega stood in ramrod-straight military
style in a Miami courtroom and railed for three hours against the United
States, ridiculing Bush's stated reason for invading Panama: to protect
the Panama Canal and the lives of Americans there who were threatened by
Noriega.
"There was never any danger to the canal or to American citizens in
Panama," said Noriega, who contended he had been a longtime U.S.
ally and CIA confidant. "Panama was invaded because I was an
obstacle to President Bush, who preferred me dead."
Maybe so. But why make a movie--titled "Noriega: God's
Favorite," scheduled for release later this year on Showtime--about
this dark and brooding man? After all, he was more a thug than an icon.
He was a Buddhist who kept in his office a picture of Hitler next to a
statue of the Virgin Mary. His heroes included Moammar Kadafi and Mother
Teresa. He killed and tortured people but didn't eat meat because he
thought it cruel to slaughter animals. Go figure.
"Before I read the script, my impression of Noriega was the same as
everyone else's--that he was a monster, a trumped-up little
dictator," said Hoskins, whose role in 1986's
"Mona Lisa" earned him a best-actor Academy Award nomination.
"He's a lot more complex and interesting than that. But it's not my
job to make a judgment whether the guy is good or evil. My job is to
translate the writer's and director's vision. Why did I want the role?
Because"--and he winks here--"after I met the director I
realized Roger was totally around the bend. Insanity has always
attracted me."
Spottiswoode sees the film not as history but as what he calls a
"speculative biography." It compresses the last four years of
Noriega's dictatorship into two and deals with what might have gone on
behind closed doors.
"It's speculative in the sense that this is about what a person
might be," Spottiswoode said. "These events did happen. And
there was a character in some ways like this."
Like key members of the cast, Spottiswoode (whose credits include
"Hiroshima"; the last James Bond thriller, "Tomorrow
Never Dies"; and "Under Fire," set during the Nicaraguan
revolution) is working for a modest salary on the $5-million film. If
"Noriega" lives up to expectations, it may be released in
theaters before it plays on cable--something Showtime did with
"Gods and Monsters," which won the 1998 Oscar for best adapted
screenplay.
"I'm always interested in complicated, strange, dark characters,
and that is Noriega," Spottiswoode said. "He's a man from the
streets who sort of invented himself. And if you look hard enough into a
character like this, I think, in the extreme, we find a heightened
vision of ourselves. There but for the grace of God goes us."
* * *Spottiswoode admits that Showtime is taking a risk
on the project. Political films are a tough sell in the first place;
"Noriega" deals with a period of history most Americans have
forgotten, and the general himself is hardly an endearing figure.
Besides, how is the audience meant to react to this man who was as
charming as he was cruel, as complex as he was simple?
"I think we're going to be blamed for not making up our
minds," Spottiswoode said. "But that doesn't bother me. It's
far too simple to just portray him as a thug who bullied his way to
power."
Indeed, almost everything about Noriega and his rise to power is a
contradiction. Born out of wedlock, he was abandoned by his mother when
he was just 5; he grew up an orphan in the slums of Panama. He was ugly
as all get-out and always with beautiful women. He was brutal and
ruthless, and foreign leaders paid him homage. He was a man of religious
faith and a witch doctor. Drug lords gave him millions in protection
money only to find their businesses destroyed by his treachery. But
Noriega didn't worry. He was a survivor and was convinced he was blessed
with good fortune because God had chosen him as a favorite son.
The script started taking form while Lawrence Wright (now a staff writer
for the New Yorker) was watching CNN at his home in Austin, Texas. It
was 1989 and American troops had surrounded the papal nunciature in
Panama where Noriega had taken refuge. They were trying to get him to
surrender by driving him crazy with rock music blasting at ear-splitting
decibels. Wright was struck by the seriousness and the absurdity of the
drama and asked himself: "I wonder what's going on, what people are
saying inside the nunciary?"
Wright made two trips to Panama and tried to turn Noriega's final months
into a play. It didn't work. He fiddled with a novel, struggled to
rewrite the play, and finally set the whole project aside for two years.
Then he tried a movie script and something magical happened. The words
flew out of his computer. In three weeks he was done. Never had writing
been easier or more fun.
"I was interested in Noriega from the moment of the invasion,"
Wright said. "He was full of so many contradictions. For one thing,
he was actively seeking spiritual resolution, and that called to me as a
writer. Despite the terrible things he did, he was a man looking for
love and forgiveness.
"Did I want to meet him for my research? It was tempting, but that
would have made me a journalist. I wanted to be free to create my own
characters and take real events and imagine how they must have
happened."
Wright's script caused a buzz in Hollywood and got him some writing jobs
but no Noriega film. Too political, no good-guy hero, past history, the
skeptics scoffed. Producer Nancy Hardin had the script for seven years
before she found a willing risk-taker: Showtime, which was greatly
influenced by Spottiswoode's interest in directing.
"I think you can safely say everyone in Hollywood saw the
script--cable, all the independent film distribution companies, people
at the studios who I thought had the sensibilities for a project like
this," Hardin said. "A lot of people who read it said, 'Geez,
this is really great.' But when push came to shove. . . ."
* * *Now it's a month into filming. Manila's Agustin
Church has been used as both the nunciature in Panama and the Copacabana
nightclub in Havana. The presidential suite at the venerable Manila
Hotel--Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquarters during World War II--has
served as the Helmsley Park Lane hotel in New York. And the abandoned
office building--once the home of the national lottery--where Noriega is
pushed to the window at gunpoint has been emptied by the Showtime crew
of tons of trash, a few dead pigeons and stacks of years-old newspapers.
In the second-floor room that has been remodeled as a replica of
Noriega's Panama office, art director Colin Gibson, shirtless in the
breathless heat, is breaking the windows with a hammer and singeing the
Venetian blinds with a candle. They soon will look as though they had
been blown away by bullets.
Wright, hunched over a glass-topped table nearby, is tapping away on his
computer, polishing his novel on Noriega's last years that Simon &
Schuster will publish to coincide with the movie's release. A stack of
Uzis and M-16s is on the floor by his laptop.
Hoskins has survived another grinding Manila traffic
jam--taking an hour-plus to get to the portside set from the Mandarin
Hotel, four miles away--and in a tattered trailer outside he's paying
his daily 90-minute dues as makeup supervisor Nick Dudman turns him into
Noriega: false teeth, contact lenses, a black curly-haired wig fitted
over his bald head, three layers of latex to transform his face into an
acne-scarred mess.
"The heat and humidity here create real problems with the
makeup," Dudman says. "On top of that, Bob sweats profusely.
So we had to invent something new for his facial makeup. The only place
I could find the material I needed for it was in Switzerland."
One of the intriguing aspects of the film is that everyone seems to come
away with a different impression of Noriega. Some find him despicable,
some amusing, some an appealing but wickedly flawed character. To Nestor
Carbonell--known to TV audiences as Luis Riviera, a magazine
photographer in NBC's "Suddenly Susan" series--it matters a
great deal that few people are likely to view Noriega favorably after
seeing "God's Favorite."
"There's something personal to me in this role," said
Carbonell, a Harvard graduate raised in New York. His parents left Cuba
in 1960. His father fought in the Bay of Pigs. One uncle was
assassinated by Fidel Castro's forces, another was imprisoned. "I
know too much about Central American dictators," he said, "and
I leave this project thinking Noriega was a terribly evil man. If he had
been portrayed otherwise, I would not have been happy."
Finally, assistant director Cellin Gluck, who can chew out the tardy and
the inattentive in four languages, including Farsi and Japanese, has
everyone back in Noriega's second-floor office. Hoskins--forever
cheerful and jocular regardless of the hour or work schedule--is by his
desk when Carbonell, playing Major Giroldi, leader of the coup that
eventually fails, bursts in the door with his rebel followers.
Hoskins is again forced to the window at gunpoint. The
soldiers outside are yelling for his head, as they have through six
rehearsals and two takes, and after Spottiswoode says, "Cut!" Hoskins
eyes them all and, slipping back into his cockney accents, shouts out
with a smile, "Shut up!" - - -
David Lamb Is The Times' Southeast Asia Bureau Chief, Based in Hanoi
Copyright
1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved
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