there's a story in today's LA Times about the filming of a movie in
Iraq. They were kidnapped by two sets of insurgents -- and then
arrested by the US occupying force. Exactly what's the difference
between being kidnapped and being arrested there?

http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/cl-ca-iraq4feb04,0,2698162.story
WORLD CINEMA

Too much realism on location in Iraq
Mohamed Daradji's crew for 'Ahlaam' was kidnapped -- first by Sunnis,
then by Shiites -- and jailed by U.S. forces.

By Ashraf Khalil
Times Staff Writer

February 4, 2007

MOHAMED DARADJI knelt in the dust at the sheik's feet, begging for his
life and the lives of his companions. The gunmen, who had grabbed them
in midscene off a Baghdad street, were Sunni Muslims, loyalists to
Saddam Hussein's fallen regime. So Daradji, a Shiite, fervently swore
he was a fellow Sunni, a Baath Party member, anything to make the
beatings stop.

It didn't work.

"Take them," the elder leader said as the gunmen hustled the director
and his three film crew members — two of them his young nephews — into
a pickup truck. The last thing Daradji remembers is hearing the sounds
of the Tigris River nearby and knowing he was about to be executed.

"I felt the angel of death coming," said Daradji, 28.

Then he blacked out.

Every movie ever made carries with it a tale of hardship and
difficulty: budget problems, creative battles, equipment failures. But
"Ahlaam," Daradji's first feature, may just trump them all. Filmed in
post-invasion Baghdad with antiquated equipment and an untrained crew
amid collapsing security, the movie is a testament to Daradji's
resourcefulness, stubborn dedication and, to an extent, sheer dumb
luck.

Despite his hopes, the film, which he says has been hamstrung by the
lack of a promotional budget from Iraq's erstwhile Ministry of
Culture, didn't make the Oscar short list for best foreign language
film. Still searching for a distribution deal, Daradji has been on the
film festival circuit from Brooklyn to Cairo. It was well received at
the Santa Barbara International Film Festival last weekend and will be
screened at the Portland International Film Festival this month and
the Tiburon International Film Festival next month.

Daradji's film may end up being the last movie to come out of Iraq for
a while. The country's artistic life experienced a brief resurgence in
the year after the U.S.-led invasion, with musicians, painters and
actors all striving to restore Baghdad's legacy as one of the Arab
world's cultural capitals. That trend has died as Iraq descends into
civil war, with much of the educated, artistic class fleeing the
country.

"Ahlaam," set largely in a Baghdad mental hospital during the U.S.
siege of the capital, tells the tragic story of modern Iraq through
the experiences of three protagonists — two of whom spend most of the
film nearly catatonic. The film is unrelentingly dark — both in tone
and in actual lighting. Some of the scenes are so murky that it's hard
to tell what's happening; between unreliable equipment and constant
power cuts, Daradji said he sometimes had to shoot using car
headlights rigged with filters.

The arbitrary cruelty of Hussein's regime is vividly on display in the
lives of all the main characters: The title character, Ahlaam, is
driven mad when her activist fiancé is arrested on their wedding day;
Ali, a former soldier, is mutilated and forcibly committed for
deserting the army; Dr. Mehdi, the asylum's new staffer, is
blackballed to the fringes of medicine because of his father's
activist past. And the U.S. soldiers who appear at the close of the
film come off as one more disaster rather than anybody's saviors. The
ending, with Baghdad overrun by American troops, leaves little hope
that things will get better.

It was in this shattered and increasingly lawless landscape that
Daradji first conceived "Ahlaam." A Baghdad native, he left Iraq in
1995 at age 17, acquiring Dutch citizenship and a master's in film
production from Leeds Metropolitan University in England.

He returned to Iraq in autumn 2003, several months after the U.S.-led
ousting of Hussein.

"It was chaos," he said. "I found mental patients wandering in the street."

He and a friend helped deliver an escaped patient back to Baghdad's
main asylum, and Daradji stayed on as a volunteer. "I spent two weeks
going there every day, bringing clothes and cigarettes for the
patients," said Daradji. Now a resident of Leeds, England, he is an
excitable man, with a cascade of curly black hair and an ever-present
cigarette. He speaks with hand-waving passion about the conditions in
Iraq and his desire to keep filming in the country where much of his
family still lives.

His main characters — the delusional former bride, the shellshocked
soldier and the idealistic doctor — are all based directly on people
he met during that time.

With the idea in place, Daradji faced the daunting logistics of
bringing "Ahlaam" to fruition. For starters, while the Iraqi
entertainment industry had steadily produced television shows for
state-controlled channels, the country had not produced a movie in
decades. All 35-millimeter film stock had been banned under
international sanctions as a "dual use" item that could be used to
help make chemical weapons.

Functioning equipment was almost impossible to find, as were
experienced crew members, and Daradji drafted his nephews and cousins
into the effort. Seeking "natural performances," he deliberately chose
less experienced theater students and amateurs. The actor who plays
Ali, Bashir Majid, was an Iraqi journalist cast on the spot after he
interviewed Daradji.

Casting the title character proved the most difficult. A scene in
which a disoriented Ahlaam is raped scared away most of the actresses
who auditioned. Aseel Adil, the actress who took the part, agreed to
do so only if her husband could play the rapist.

Under suspicion, under fire

DARADJI began filming in mid-2004, accompanied by a police escort,
coordinating with the Dutch embassy and telling everyone they were
"student filmmakers making a short love story." Still, the filmmaker
says, they were shot at more than once by passing U.S. patrols while
filming after curfew on the Baghdad streets. When filming outdoor
flashbacks of Ali's military days, Daradji lived in fear that his sets
would be mistaken for some sort of insurgent training camp by an
American helicopter crew.

"Whenever the helicopters would approach, we would hold our breath," he said.

He created a bedsheet-sized sign on the ground reading: "Please Mr.
Pilot. I'm an Iraqi filmmaker rebuilding Iraq. Do not shoot at me.
Contact your army base." Despite the precautions, the shoot was cut
short after the Dutch Embassy advised Daradji he could no longer work
safely in Iraq. The last straw: a chaotic 24-hour period in December
2004 when Daradji and several crew members achieved a sort of modern
Iraq trifecta — kidnapped and bullied by Sunni Muslim gunmen, then
kidnapped again and bullied by Shiite Muslim gunmen, and finally
jailed and interrogated by American soldiers.

The Sunni militiamen arrived in several cars while Daradji was
shooting scenes on Baghdad's notoriously dangerous Haifa Street. A
young nephew on the crew was shot in the leg during the kidnapping.
Daradji still isn't sure why they didn't kill him by the riverside and
speculates that his captors fled after hearing a police siren.

While he and his crew were being treated, a new group of gunmen burst
into the hospital emergency room. They turned out to be Shiite gunmen
who had heard of the incident and believed Daradji was a spy, he says.
After more beatings and begging, the gunmen delivered them to the
nearest American base.

"I was so happy I felt like I was being born again," Daradji said.

The Americans promptly threw hoods on the men's heads and jailed them.
During interrogation, Daradji says, an American officer threatened to
send him to Abu Ghraib and told him, "You work for Al Qaeda. You're
making a propaganda film." The group was eventually transported to a
jail cell inside Baghdad's Green Zone, where they spent four days
while the Dutch Embassy negotiated their release. "The last three days
were actually really funny," said Daradji, who befriended his American
guards and helped them translate jokes back and forth with Iraqi
prisoners.

With the Dutch urging him to flee the country, Daradji scrambled
through three final days of shooting. "I had to cut a lot of scenes,"
he said.

Since completing the film, he's spent the last year steadily promoting
it around the world. Majid received the best male actor award at the
2006 Brooklyn International Film Festival.

Daradji says he's been particularly gratified by the American response
and the appetite among U.S. audiences for information that humanizes
the sometimes incomprehensibly tragic Iraqi reality.

"Americans really want to know what's happening there," he said. "You
hear it on the news — people killed and kidnapped and tortured. But
it's just numbers."

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

--
Jim Devine / "The truth is more important than the facts." -- Frank Lloyd Wright

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