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Something wrong with America that loves Gekko

Says Oliver Stone, whose Wall Street told us in 1987 where America is today.

Updated on: Nov 10, 2010 05:24 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Mumbai
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"America has an aggressive gene," director Oliver Stone says. He should know. Besides being his nation’s most entertaining chronicler, Stone is also currently working on a comprehensive, 12-part documentary that details America’s history, or what he calls "the untold story of the United States, everything I can’t say in a movie (feature film)." He’s put in three years of his life on it. The film isn’t ready yet. Some of the things he’s said on Mao, even Hitler, often quoted out of context, have already perked up ears for no reason.



It’s said, if you’re 20 and not a Leftist, you don’t have a heart. If you’re 50 and still a Leftist, you don’t have a head! Stone is 54, enfant, terrible still. He certainly swings to the Left, though calls himself ‘left of centre’. That may be because the centre itself, across the world, has shifted somewhat to the Right.



HT Image
HT Image
Michael Douglas

The capitalist establishment, Hollywood, that produces his movies has been only too happy to have him around. In a career that pretty much kicked off with Salvador (1986), he’s made 23 films, most of them controversial, and almost all of them commercial successes. His war movies (Born On The Fourth Of July, Platoon…) have shown America a mirror they’d rather not peer at. "We can acknowledge Vietnam so long as it relates to the memory of American

soldiers," he says.



His political films (JFK, Nixon…) — questioning, investigative, conclusive, ruthlessly biting at the powers that be — are stuff most nations will not allow to film about themselves. India? For sure not. He mentions that’s not true: "Vidhu Vinod Chopra (Bollywood producer-director) told me over lunch it’s possible here too. He made Mission Kashmir." Stone

hasn’t seen Mission Kashmir.

Yes, Mumbai, Dumbai!

Does this new financial architecture and the region interest you to make a film?

India, China, these are fascinating stories. But if I were to make a film on them, they’d have to be documentaries. In the Wall Street of 2008, New York is still the story’s centerpiece. The China story is about huge government deals that someone more familiar with the subject would be better equipped to deal with.

South Of The Border, your recent documentary set in South America, is a result of unlimited, rare access to
leaders like Raul Castro (Fidel’s brother, Cuba), Hugo Chavez (Venezuela)… To what extent do you think such “access reporting” affects the objectivity in story telling? You’re entirely indebted to your subjects. I know weak-kneed journalists face this a lot in their jobs.


You mean the Bob Woodward phenomenon, where one gains access to a story, but is expected to play the ball. This would be true (for journalism). In Looking For Fidel, for instance, there were questions for Castro given to me by HBO that were expressly hostile.

There were things the American establishment wanted to hear from Castro. I was supposed to grill him. He even got angry with me, was exhausted by the end of it, but was still not rude or impolite. A film that way is different. The footage remains uninterrupted. You’re merely letting the subjects speak for themselves, that’s all.

The Oliver Stone special is on tonight on Pix. Catch South Of The Border at 9 pm

 
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