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Los Angeles Times - MUSEUMS - Thursday, February 15, 2001
'Traffic's' Driving Force
Making of epic British miniseries that spawned current hit film triggered
some harrowing moments, recalls 'Traffik' director Alastair Reid.
By Susan King
Steven Soderbergh's complex drug thriller, "Traffic," was nominated this week
for five Oscars, including best picture and director. Its writer, Stephen Gaghan,
is up for best screenplay adaptation for the box-office hit, which stars Michael
Douglas, Catherine Zeta-Jones and Benicio Del Toro.
"Traffic" was adapted from an award-winning British miniseries, "Traffik," which
aired in England in 1989 and on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre" in 1990 and was written
by Simon Moore.
Directed by Alastair Reid ("Tales of the City"), "Traffik" weaves the epic story
of the international heroin trade through three major plot lines: A Pakistani ends
up doing anything possible to support his family when the government bans the growing
of poppy plants from which heroin is derived; a wealthy German businessman is in prison
in Hamburg on drug trafficking charges while his wife tries to outmaneuver the police;
and a British member of Parliament, head of the government's efforts to stop the heroin
flow into England, discovers that his bright and beautiful Oxford University daughter
is a heroin addict.
Bill Paterson, Lindsay Duncan and Julia Ormond, in her first role, head
the international cast.
Today through April 29, the Museum of Television & Radio in Beverly Hills
will screen the 5 1/2-hour "Traffik" in its entirety.
Director Reid recently talked about the making of "Traffik" and his impressions
of the movie "Traffic" over the phone from his home in England.
Question: Have you seen "Traffic?"
Answer: I have seen it, absolutely. It's very engrossing. I enjoyed it.
It was a bit like going to an art auction and seeing your own long-lost
paintings coming up for sale. I traveled that whole journey about 10 years ago.
So it was a strange feeling.
Q: Was there a lot of controversy swirling around "Traffik"?
A: Oh, yes. It was controversial in different aspects in different countries.
It was controversial to a certain extent in this country because the initial deal
was based on a young lady, an Oxford University student who had died. She was a
Guinness [beer] heiress. She died of an overdose at Oxford. That was the initial
idea that Simon Moore, the writer, sort of took off with. Her father was an MP
and a very important MP.
The controversy in Pakistan would be that most of the Pakistanis refused to admit
there was any opium or heroin in existence in Pakistan, which is laughable. There
are all kinds of double standards going on, particularly at the time we were doing
this. It was just toward the end of the Afghan war.
If you remember the German bit, I had a bunch of divers going over the side of the
ship because they couldn't find any heroin on the boat. We invented this idea of the
drugs having come [into port] clamped to the underside of the ship. We actually staged
that. We did clamp things on the underside of the ship. Lo and behold, the real customs
people discovered a ship that had all of that stuff clamped underneath it for real. It
was a case of reality imitating art.
Q: Did you run into any problems with drug traffickers when you were filming in Pakistan?
A: It was an omnipresent kind of worry, in a way. Then in the scene where the Pakistani
farmer sets off to learn how to turn opium into heroin, I spoke to the art department to
try to get somebody who knew how this process went so we could sort of fake it up for the
series. The DEA [Drug Enforcement Administration] representative in northwest Pakistan
said "I'll get you real chemists." They were Afghans who were brought up from an
internment camp. They were actual drug chemists. The DEA man provided us with
about 22 kilos of opium and so we set about turning that into heroin.
The extraordinary thing was they would only do this in front of
me. They would show me the first stage and then I would reproduce the
first stage for the actors and the camera. We went through about three or
four different stages at the end of which we had made approximately a
quarter of a million dollars' worth of pure heroin. Part of the deal
with the DEA was that it would then be burned in front of these two Afghan
chemists to teach them a lesson, so to speak. When we burned this little pile of
heroin, the whole crew rushed downwind of it and would be seen taking deep breaths.
It was extraordinary.
Q: Since you were shooting in England, Germany and Pakistan, was this logistically
a nightmare to produce?
A: Basically, the way we did it was, we traveled very light. I had different teams
working on different aspects in different countries. So the one who was doing most
of the traveling around was me. I had an art department in Hamburg and a different
art department in Pakistan. It started off in London and then went to Germany and
finished off in Pakistan. When we went up in the mountains [in Pakistan], we were
traveling very light.
I remember we had a huge generator we brought from England. The hotel we got into,
a kind of boarding house for the whole crew, was quite well up in the mountains. It
did have an electrical system but there was just no electricity running through it,
so we patched our generator to the whole hotel so the generator was working day and night.
Q: Julia Ormond is just amazing as the drug-addicted daughter in "Traffik." How did you
find her?
A: Simon Moore and I went and did the casting. I can remember, for instance,
in London when we were casting for the girl who was played by Julia Ormond,
we had actresses in all day doing auditions for us. We were just seeing the
last one and it was one of those days when you think to yourself it was pretty
good, but I am not sure if we have seen the right person. Where do we go next?
And in ran this girl. She said, "I'm so sorry I'm late." Then she admitted to
not even being late. She hadn't been put on any list, but she heard there was
an audition. She had a script and she sat down and did a huge scene all on her
own. It was Julia Ormond. We cast her on the spot and she was still at drama school.
Q: "Traffic" pretty much follows "Traffik," save for the subplot involving the farmer.
A: The rest of it exactly the same. They must have pored over the video of our film for
months studying it. It was quite clearly exactly the same, except, as you said, the
Pakistani farmer bit.
* "Traffik" screens in two parts: Part 1, which includes episodes 1 and 2, screens
Thursdays at 2 p.m., alternate Thursdays at 6 p.m. and Saturdays at 2 p.m. Part 2,
which includes episodes 3, 4 and 5, screens Fridays at 2 p.m., alternate Thursdays
at 6 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m., today through April 29 at the Museum of TV & Radio,
465 N. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills. Admission is free; suggested contribution is $6 for
adults; $4 for senior citizens; $3 for children under 13. Call (310) 786-1000. Copyright
2001 Los Angeles Times
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