And he made good on that promise, says
producer Mike Medavoy, Chairman and CEO of Phoenix Pictures. “When
I read the script for Basic, I was captivated,” he
says. “It is packed with dark, Hitchcockian twists
and turns. The story is told by several characters whose
versions conflict with one another, which keeps the audience
guessing as to what happened that day in the jungle and why.
It all leads up to a surprise ending that you never see coming.”
Brad Fischer, co-executive producer on
Basic and vice-president of production for Phoenix Pictures,
who brought the script to Medavoy says “what really
sets this story apart is the way it builds on the twists
and turns of successful military movies. You think you’re
getting a typical military thriller like “The General’s
Daughter” or “A Few Good Men” and then
it totally derails you...turns you on your ear. It’s
incredibly satisfying when, as an audience member, you’re
outsmarted only to realize that the truth was in front of
your eyes throughout the entire journey.”
Medavoy’s choice of John McTiernan
to direct the project was based on the director’s adept
use of the camera as a narrative presence in his films. It
was particularly apt for this story in which incidents are
told and retold from differing points of view. “In
this kind of story the camera has to be active and comment
on what’s going on,” says McTiernan. “The
approach and the angles change depending on whose version
of the story we’re watching. A soldier who is a dumb
innocent in his version becomes the mastermind in another
character’s retelling of the story. So the narrative
style has to subtly shift every time. It’s like you’re
moving deeper and deeper into the jungle, if you will. It
all has to accelerate, intensify and play at a higher voltage
as you go forward.”
For McTiernan, Basic also satisfied all
the definitions of a true thriller. “Something potentially
horrific happened to a group of people who have completely
vanished and you follow a couple of people who are trying
to figure it out,” he says. “And it just keeps
getting more and more dangerous until, eventually, the whole
thing turns upside down and nothing that you thought was
going on was actually true.”
BRINGING THE STORY TO LIFE
When McTiernan was approached to direct
Basic, John Travolta had already been signed to portray the
pivotal character of Tom Hardy, an ex-Ranger and DEA agent
who has been suspended amidst allegations of taking bribes
from a Panamanian drug lord. “That’s what attracted
me to the whole project. The role of Tom Hardy calls on John
to do what audiences love to see him do, be sparky, mischievous
and a little outrageous,” says McTiernan. “The
thing I’ve always admired about John is his irrepressible
sense of joy. No matter what role he’s playing, you
can tell he’s having a wonderful time doing it.”
For Travolta, the role, while challenging,
was a comfortable fit. “The military environment seems
to fit my persona,” says the actor. “What I liked
about Basic was that it made serious physical and mental
demands on me.”
As soon as he signed aboard, Travolta immediately
threw himself into developing his character. For three months
prior to the start of filming, he worked out six days a week
and lost 25 pounds. He also trained with the First Battalion,
75th Ranger Regiment at Hunter Army Air Field in Columbus,
Georgia. He continued his workout and nutritional regimen
throughout production. “Hardy is a tough guy and he’s
one of the DEA’s best. He’s clever, smart and
can clearly manipulate situations and people to get what
he wants,” says Travolta. “Also, he’s witty
and has a confident air of sexuality about him. And that
required me to be at my fittest and my sharpest.”
Joining Travolta at the head of the stellar
cast is Samuel L. Jackson. It’s the first time that
the two have starred together since the Quentin Tarantino-directed
Pulp Fiction, for which both received Academy Award® nominations.
“We shared a big moment in our personal
histories,” Travolta says of Jackson. “Pulp Fiction
moved both our careers forward. When we signed on to Basic,
I was surprised it had taken us so long to work together
again.“
“We have a chemistry that works,” says
Jackson. “We feel it even when we’re in a scene
with somebody else.”
Travolta responds, “There’s
a naturalness when I work with Sam. I instantly become a
better actor, because he inspires that.”
Jackson plays Army Ranger Sgt. Nathan West,
an elite jungle warfare instructor who specializes in covert
operations and whose latest training mission, in the middle
of a hurricane, goes terribly wrong.
The reason McTiernan was intrigued with
Jackson playing Sgt. West (they’d previously worked
together on Die Hard With a Vengeance) was that “the
character is a holy terror, really tough, but depending on
how you look at him, he’s either a monster or a good
father who wants to make sure that his soldiers learn what
they need to learn in order to stay alive. That kind of role
is part of our movie heritage, going as far back as John
Wayne, the drill sergeant who is brutal as hell until you
realize he’s doing it because he really cares about
his men.”
Jackson was fascinated by the subtleties
and complexities under West’s hard-edged exterior. “He’s
a very hard guy to read,” he explains. “Some
people will see him as a bully, but he knows he has a job
to do. He’s got a group of people who need to be trained
and he has to weed out the weak.”
For a director primarily known for movies
such as Die Hard and The Hunt for Red October, McTiernan
essentially saw Basic as a great date movie that would appeal
to men and women. Like his recent hit, The Thomas Crown Affair,
the story is fashioned so that the central female character,
Capt. Julia Osborne, is the person who finally pieces together
the truth.
Connie Nielsen portrays Capt. Osborne,
head of Fort Clayton’s military police and head of
the investigation. For Medavoy, the actress had the right
stuff for Osborne. “She can be authoritative, vulnerable
and incredibly sexy all at the same time. She brought dimensions
to Julia Osborne that weren’t even on the page.”
Unlike Travolta’s loquacious Hardy, much of Nielsen’s performance
is reactive. “She does a lot of her work without speaking,” says
Travolta, “because her character is not someone who wastes words. Connie
instinctively sensed that.”
“Osborne is very emotional, despite
her icy exterior. At the same time, with all her experience,
she’s also very naïve,” says Nielsen. “But
throughout the film, her instincts keep nagging at her, telling
her there’s more to the story than what she’s
being told. Finally, it’s up to her to solve the mystery.
And as she slowly uncovers the truth, she serves as the audience’s
guide through the maze of lies and deception.”
Because Osborne is the eyes and ears of
the audience, director McTiernan pivoted the movie around
her. “As the audience questions what they’re
seeing and second guessing what they hear, so does Osborne,” says
McTiernan. “All the conspiracy and manipulation is
filtered through her eyes. Every time she is surprised, so
are we. Just as she’s being played and led to certain
conclusions, so is the audience. And when she begins to question
the inconsistencies in the stories she’s heard, we’re
right there with her. She and the audience are in sync the
whole way. And that’s the true beauty of the story.”
TRANSFORMING AN AIRFIELD INTO A JUNGLE
To capture the visual density of the tropical
jungles of Panama, director McTiernan turned to production
designer Dennis Bradford, who had brought style and distinction
to the look of such films as Shaft, The Thomas Crown Affair
and Deep Impact. His most daunting task, according to Bradford,
was to create a rain forest on Cecil Field, a decommissioned
airfield in Jacksonville, Florida.
McTiernan and Bradford identified the location
from a helicopter while on a scouting trip for the film.
Cecil Field sported vegetation that was similar to the tropics
it was supposed to represent. “We were lucky to find
a site that was under large oak trees,” explains Bradford, “because
that provided us with a tall enough canopy to use as a foundation
for a rain forest.”
The ground under the oak trees proved to
be flat and featureless, however, and it required the labor
force of about 100 people to create the hilly terrain needed
for the film. Under Bradford’s supervision, the crew
imported approximately 100 palm trees and 400 to 500 smaller
plants to the site. A bunker, where several of the film’s
most dramatic scenes transpire, was built in the center of
the jungle.
Two large lighting towers were erected
and surrounded by specially built banyan trees enabling the
towers to blend in with the jungle foliage. Bradford and
his crew designed and crafted the five huge trees -- complete
with roots and mushrooms -- out of spray foam and other sculpting
materials. During production, the electricians accessed the
lighting scaffolds by climbing up through the inside of the
man-made tree trunks.
“Bringing plants to a site is the
easy part,” says Bradford. “The real trick is
to make the site work for the crew, so that the camera can
be positioned properly and the wind effects machines can
be placed.”
Working hand in hand with Bradford was
special effects coordinator Conrad V. Brink (Kate & Leopold,
the HBO series “Oz”), whose job it was to create
in the wind, rain and lightning. “And that was no mean
feat since the entire film takes place in a rainstorm and
a hurricane,” according to Bradford, “and Conrad
had only a week to prepare.”
Four six-foot high electric fans provided
the wind effects. But local Florida ordinances mandated that
only existing water be used to create the rain, according
to Brink. “Luckily, there was a creek that ran through
the jungle set.” However, the creek had to be tested
for chemicals first and proved to be clean enough to use
as rain.
Brink and his crew secured nine rain towers
40 feet up in the trees. The towers were connected to hoses
that ran to a truck, which could pump up to 750 gallons per
minute, though Brink was careful to conserve as much of the
creek water as he could. “After each take we’d
turn off the truck so that we didn’t pump the creek
dry,” he explains.
To provide a steady stream of precipitation
throughout the film, Brink utilized a crane and a 60-foot
pipe with four nozzles (called a rain bar). The pipe and
nozzles were hoisted up 100 feet and provided a consistent
stream of rain.
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