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ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
 

This page was created on April 24 , 2004
This page was last updated on April 25, 2004


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ABOUT THIS FILM
Click to enlargeAbout The Production
The start of production in Mexico City for MAN ON FIRE marked the culmination of a 20-year odyssey by director Tony Scott and Regency Enterprises to bring the project to the screen. Regency owner and founder Arnon Milchan purchased motion picture rights to the 1980 novel Man on Fire by A.J. Quinnell (a pseudonym – to this day, the author’s name remains unknown to the public). The story’s protagonist, CIA counter-terrorist John Creasy, appeared in three subsequent Quinnell thrillers: The Perfect Kill, The Blue Ring and Message from Hell.

Milchan recognized the book’s cinematic potential and approached director Tony Scott, who had just helmed THE HUNGER, to develop a film based on the novel. “The story is a huge emotional roller-coaster ride,” says Scott. “It’s about a guy who has lost his way and is reborn by guarding a nine-year-old-girl. When she is kidnapped, he goes after those responsible and works his way through the kidnapping chain of command, and he is unforgiving in his pursuit.”

Despite his enthusiasm for the project, Scott fell out and moved on to direct TOP GUN. Nevertheless, in the almost two decades that followed, Scott’s interest in MAN ON FIRE continued unabated. “The project stayed with me all this time,” he says. “I never really lost sight of it.”

Years later, producer Lucas Foster joined forces with Regency to develop another adaptation of Man on Fire, and two-time Oscar®-nominated screenwriter Brian Helgeland (L.A. CONFIDENTIAL, MYSTIC RIVER) penned a new screenplay. In 2003, Tony Scott, with whom Foster collaborated on CRIMSON TIDE, signed in to direct, nearly two decades after he had first encountered the project. Helgeland’s initial screenplay drafts, like the novel, were set in Italy. But Foster and Scott, realizing that that locale and its Mafia antagonists were tired – and that kidnappings had virtually been eliminated in Italy thanks to tough new laws – had locations scouted in Brazil, Guatemala and Mexico.

The filmmakers’ voluminous research revealed that kidnapping has now become a way of life in Mexico City. “Kidnapping is a huge business there,” says Scott, “very controlled and organized. It’s an actual industry.” Scott researched case histories of kidnappings in Mexico and screenwriter Brian Helgeland re-engineered the story accordingly. “The research was invaluable in bringing a verisimilitude to the story,” says Scott. “Even if the audience doesn’t know the procedures and worlds we detail in the film, I think it will feel real to them.”

Scott says Helgeland’s contributions to the project were invaluable. “What Brian did so well was create two stories,” says the director. “The first story, or first half of the film, is about a guy finding his way back into life through this child; the second story is his quest for revenge.”

Helgeland likens MAN ON FIRE to “Beauty and the Beast.” “Pita knows there’s a heart beating away inside of Creasy, even if he doesn’t know it’s there,” he says. “When the thing that brings him back to life is taken away, he becomes enraged because now his heart’s beating again.”

Taking on the role of the “man on fire” is two-time Academy Award® winner Denzel Washington, who previously worked with Tony Scott on the thriller CRIMSON TIDE. Scott recognized certain qualities in the actor that would serve him well as Creasy. “I love Denzel’s obsessive quality and his internal darkness,” says the director. “There’s a hardness to Denzel that’s really interesting. He knows how to draw it out and use it effectively. Denzel really brings across how Creasy closes himself off as a defense mechanism against the world. So when his heart does begin to thaw, it’s all the more moving.”

“Creasy has lost himself in alcohol, lost his purpose and life, and couldn’t cope with what he had done as a government operative/assassin and what he is good at,” says Washington. “He is detached, and that’s what happens when you kill people for a living. Creasy is a lost soul who no longer has the ability to love, and through this little girl, he finds himself and reconnects with his soul and life.”

Indeed, despite his initial resistance to Pita, Creasy cannot resist the youngster, who is bubbling over with life and spirit. “She’s just exploding with possibility, emotion and curiosity – all the things Creasy has rejected and denied himself,” says Washington.

Tony Scott and producer Lucas Foster cast Dakota Fanning as Pita after they saw her work opposite Sean Penn in the drama I AM SAM. Their pursuit of and faith in the young actress was more than rewarded. “Dakota is among the most talented actresses I’ve ever worked with, and she’s only nine!” says Foster. “She’s like the sun – a burst of energy.” Adds Scott, “Dakota is uncanny – she’s nine going on 19. She has an instinctual understanding of human nature. We’d be watching Denzel improvise or pull and push scenes in different ways, and she was always able to go with the flow.”

Fanning describes Pita as a girl who “loves life and loves to swim.” In fact, the character’s aquatic abilities play a major role in bringing her and Creasy together when the hardened bodyguard reluctantly agrees to coach her in a swimming competition. While Washington trained to move and think like a bodyguard under technical advisor and executive protection expert Don Rosche, Fanning worked for months on her swimming, Spanish lessons (Pita, with a Mexican father and American mother, is bi-lingual), and piano lessons. She also spent considerable off-screen time with her on-screen parents, Marc Anthony and Radha Mitchell, to help them bond as a family.

Bringing Creasy together with Pita and her family is Rayburn, an old friend of Creasy’s who has found success south of the border. At first, Scott had Oscar winner Christopher Walken in mind to play corrupt lawyer Jordan Kalfus (a role eventually taken by Mickey Rourke). “But I told Tony that I was fed up with playing bad guys,” says Walken, with a laugh. “I wanted to play the good guy!” Scott was more than happy to oblige and gave Walken the part of Rayburn. “Chris can read the phone book and make it interesting and funny. He brings a lot of dynamic shadings to Rayburn.”

Australian-born Radha Mitchell portrays Pita’s mother, Lisa Ramos, the American “trophy wife” of a young Mexican industrialist. Lisa, like Creasy, goes through a complex and unexpected character arc, which Mitchell enjoyed bringing to life. “Initially, Lisa is at a point of confusion, but as the story progresses she clarifies what she wants out of life and what’s really important to her,” says Mitchell. “She gets broken down by what happens, and she is rebuilt in a new way”

Lisa Ramos’ husband, Samuel, is a member of the Mexican aristocracy who fears losing his lifestyle and family due to a burdensome debt – leading him to take extreme measures that have dire consequences. “Samuel feels a lot a lot of tension because he doesn’t have the money he once had, and his wife loves to spend money,” says music superstar and actor Marc Anthony, who takes on the role. “He adores his daughter but cannot spend as much time with her as he’d like to, due to frequent business travels.”

Anthony, who has appeared in seven feature films, says MAN ON FIRE is his most challenging film role to date. “I even found myself trembling at times working with Tony Scott and Denzel Washington – they’re such formidable talents,” he says.

Famed Italian actor Giancarlo Giannini portrays Manzano, whom the actor calls “an honest cop surrounded by corruption.” Manzano uses Creasy – even as Creasy uses him – to fight Mexico City’s wave of kidnappings. Scott and Helgeland created the character to have someone to support Creasy’s relentless pursuit of the kidnappers – to get Creasy information he wouldn’t otherwise have access to, and to have him do what Manzano cannot do himself: find and stop the vicious kidnapping cells.

Manzano and another character, newspaper editor Mariana, played by Rachel Ticotin, represent a positive vision of Mexico and provide a stark contrast to the kidnappers’ dark world of corruption and crime. “MAN ON FIRE depicts the two halves of Mexico,” says producer Lucas Foster. “The half that’s rampant with corruption and poverty, and the other half made up of the people who are trying to clean up crime and, especially kidnappings.”

Rachel Ticotin’s Mariana, looking to expose the truth behind the kidnappings, helps Creasy make his way through the kidnappers’ sophisticated organization. “She’s manipulating him into doing what no one else can,” says Ticotin. “So it’s a weird relationship – they’re using each other.”

“Creasy doesn’t know who organized the kidnapping of Pita,” says Denzel Washington. “So he has to rely on Mariana and Manzano. They can’t get the top guy, but Creasy can because of his special training and the fact that he’s not encumbered by the Mexican bureaucracy.”

Given Tony Scott’s extensive research into Mexico and the social and political conditions that led to its ranking as third in the world in kidnappings, it’s not surprising that the country itself, as well as its capital, Mexico City, play important roles in MAN ON FIRE. Scott captures Mexico City’s pollution, traffic and the cacophony that bombard its citizens. “I wanted to make the city a major character,” says Scott. “It has a rich cultural history and is full of visual contrasts and architectural richness. It is sensual and beautiful and, at the same time, it’s dark and dangerous.”

To give MAN ON FIRE a taught, claustrophobic, and reality-based feel, the production filmed mostly on location throughout Mexico City. Shooting in the oldest, largest and most traffic-congested city in North America was a constant challenge. More than 50 vehicles moving cast, crew and equipment had to negotiate the city’s narrow and crowded streets, spending hours making their way through grinding traffic. In addition, general strikes were an almost daily fact of life, and the filmmakers had to wade through Mexico City’s labyrinthine bureaucracy of 17 mini-states, each with its own municipality and governor. “But it was all worth it,” says Foster, “because audiences will see a contemporary Mexico of extremes, brimming with light, color and extraordinary people.”

“Extremes” might also describe Tony Scott’s and director of photography Paul Cameron’s use of light, color, exposures, and film processes to reflect Creasy’s emotional and psychological upheaval during and after the kidnapping. “I like experimenting with different cinematic methods to identify emotions,” says Scott who, like Cameron, cut his filmmaking teeth in the often-non-traditional world of making commercials. “The kidnapping scene seemed a good point to try to identify the internal workings of Creasy’s mind through cinematic technique.”

To achieve an often startling photographic style, Scott and Cameron hand-cranked the camera to slow down or speed up movement (a technique dating back to the silent film era), used reversal film stock to make the colors more vivid, created multiple exposures by imprinting three sets of images on the same plate of film, and used Panavision XL cameras and even 16mm cameras for maximum maneuverability. To add even greater visual impact to specific sequences, Scott and Cameron employed multiple cameras, which often proved a formidable challenge to the cinematographer. “Multiple cameras are insane!” Cameron remembers. “We had to keep them all on a specific axis of light, which is really tricky. But among the many advantages of using multiple cameras is that you’re getting the performances precisely as they happen.”

Denzel Washington continues to be awed by Scott’s directorial skills – and his penchant for multiple cameras. “Yeah, we called him ‘Nine-Camera Tony’,” jokes the actor. “I didn’t know what the heck he was doing with all those cameras [in reality, Scott used “only” four], but it’s inspiring because he paints beautiful canvasses with them.” Adds Washington, who made his directorial debut with ANTWONE FISHER in 2002: “It was a real education for me as a new filmmaker.”

However formidable MAN ON FIRE’s look and occasional non-linear editing style, Scott is quick to point out that the technique is there to serve the story, its characters and its emotions. “The film is an emotional journey,” says Scott. “It’s about rebirth and second chances, and the lengths one man will go to when those very things are taken away from him.”

TONY SCOTT (Director/Producer) is a master of the visceral, balancing technical virtuosity with an exuberant sense of tempo to create a series of landmark action films. With another high-profile project set for release, Scott shows no sign of slowing the pace that has made him one of Hollywood’s most successful directors.

In 2001, Scott was at the helm with two other big-name stars in SPY GAME. The taut, ambitious thriller reunited Robert Redford and Brad Pitt for the first time since 1992’s A RIVER RUNS THROUGH IT. Scott’s ability to mine box office gold from a deft blending of material and talent was evident in his last film, ENEMY OF THE STATE. Starring Will Smith and Gene Hackman and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, the political thriller became one of biggest hits of 1998. That same year, Scott directed one episode of the cable series “The Hunger” trilogy, with Giovanni Ribisi and David Bowie, an adaptation of his 1983 feature film.

In 1996, Scott joined a very short list of billion-dollar-grossing directors thanks to the success of his two previous films. Starring Oscar winners Denzel Washington and Gene Hackman as rival commanders of a nuclear submarine, CRIMSON TIDE was an intense, claustrophobic thriller that garnered both critical and popular acclaim. Scott followed that with THE FAN, in which Robert De Niro starred as an obsessed fan who stalks baseball star Wesley Snipes.

Born in Newcastle, Tyne and Wear, England, Scott attended the Sunderland Art School, where he received a fine arts degree in painting. While completing a yearlong post-graduate study at Leeds College, he developed an interest in cinematography and made ONE OF THE MISSING, a half-hour film financed by the British Film Institute and based on an Ambrose Bierce short story. He then went on to earn his Master of Fine Arts degree at the Royal College of Arts, completing another film for the British Film Institute, LOVING MEMORY, from an original script financed by Albert Finney.

In 1973, Scott partnered with brother Ridley to form London-based commercial production company, RSA. Over the next decade, Scott created some of the world’s most entertaining and memorable commercials, honing his film vocabulary and picking up every major honor in the field, including a number of CLIO awards, several Silver and Gold Lion Awards from the Cannes International Television/Cinema Commercials Festival and London’s prestigious Designers & Art Directors Award.

While working as a commercial director, Scott also made three movies for television: two documentaries and a one-hour special entitled AUTHOR OF BELTRAFFIO, from the story by Henry James. Scott made his feature debut in 1983 with the modern vampire story THE HUNGER, starring Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie, and Susan Sarandon. Three years later he directed Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis in the mega-blockbuster TOP GUN, whose stunning aerial sequences helped make it a global success. Scott confirmed his place as one of Hollywood’s premiere action directors the following year with BEVERLY HILLS COP II, starring Eddie Murphy.

Over the next five years, Scott directed four more movies, including REVENGE (1988), with Kevin Costner and Anthony Quinn; DAYS OF THUNDER (1990), starring Tom Cruise and Robert Duvall; THE LAST BOY SCOUT (1991), with Bruce Willis; and the critically acclaimed TRUE ROMANCE (1993), starring Christian Slater, Roseanna Arquette and Christopher Walken, with a script by Quentin Tarantino.

In early 1995, the Scott brothers provided a big boost for the British film industry by purchasing the legendary Shepperton Studios in West London, where more than 600 feature films have been made.

CAST

DENZEL WASHINGTON (Creasy) is a two-time Academy Award-winning actor with over 30 films to his credit. His acting accolades also include Golden Globe®, NAACP, Emmy®, and SAG nominations and awards. Washington has enjoyed a distinguished career, consistently entertaining and surprising audiences with his rich and colorful character portrayals.

In 2002, Washington received an Oscar for Best Actor for his portrayal of jaded Los Angeles Police Department veteran Alonzo Harris in Antoine Fuqua’s TRAINING DAY. That same year he made his directorial debut with the inspiring ANTWONE FISHER, which he also produced and appeared in.

Washington has worked with many of the industry’s leading filmmakers. He worked with Tony Scott on CRIMSON TIDE, and starred in three movies for Edward Zwick: GLORY, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, COURAGE UNDER FIRE and THE SIEGE. For Norman Jewison, Washington made his feature film debut in A SOLDIER’S STORY and years later, played the lead role in THE HURRICANE, for which he won a Golden Globe and an Academy Award nomination.

For Spike Lee, Washington starred in MO’ BETTER BLUES, MALCOLM X, for which he received an Academy Award nomination, and HE GOT GAME. He also starred in Sidney Lumet’s POWER, Sir Richard Attenborough’s CRY FREEDOM, for which he received an Academy Award nomination, Alan J. Pakula’s THE PELICAN BRIEF and Jonathan Demme’s Academy Award-winning PHILADELPHIA and the upcoming THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE.

Additional film credits include REMEMBER THE TITANS (for which Washington received an NAACP Image Award as Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture Drama), OUT OF TIME, DEVIL IN A BLUE DRESS, JOHN Q, FOR QUEEN AND COUNTRY, THE MIGHTY QUINN, MISSISSIPPI MASALA, MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING, THE PREACHER’S WIFE, FALLEN and THE BONE COLLECTOR.

In addition to his accomplishments on screen, Washington produced the HBO documentary “Half Past Autumn: The Life and Works of Gordon Parks,” which was nominated for two Emmys. He served as executive producer on “Hank Aaron: Chasing The Dream,” a biographical documentary for TBS which earned an Emmy Award nomination. He also narrated “John Henry,” which received a Grammy® nomination for Best Spoken Word Album For Children. In 1996, he won the NAACP Image Award for his performance in the animated children’s special, “Happily Ever After: Rumpelstiltskin.”

A native of Mt. Vernon, New York, Washington had his career sights set on medicine when he attended Fordham University. During a stint as a summer camp counselor, he appeared in theater productions and discovered a love for acting. Upon graduation from Fordham, Washington was accepted into San Francisco’s prestigious American Conservatory Theater and spent an intensive year studying acting.

Upon his return to New York, his Obie® Award-winning performance in the Off-Broadway production of “A Soldier’s Play” captured the attention of Hollywood and led him to be cast in the long running hit television series “St. Elsewhere” as Dr. Philip Chandler.

DAKOTA FANNING (Pita Ramos) is currently shooting Twentieth Century Fox’s psychological thriller HIDE AND SEEK with Robert De Niro. She became the youngest actor, at age 7, to be nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award™ for her performance as the daughter of a mentally handicapped man played by Sean Penn in I AM SAM.

In addition to her SAG Award® nomination, Dakota also won the 2001 Critics Choice Award for Best Young Actor and a multitude of other prestigious awards.

Her other credits include UPTOWN GIRLS with Brittany Murphy, THE CAT IN THE HAT with Mike Meyers, TRAPPED with Charlize Theron, and SWEET HOME ALABAMA with Reese Witherspoon. On the small screen she landed several guest appearances on “Friends,” “ER,” “Strong Medicine,” “C.S.I.,” “The Practice,” “Malcolm in the Middle,” “Spin City” and “Ally McBeal.”

In Steven Spielberg’s Emmy-nominated miniseries “Taken,” the Sci-Fi Channel’s highest rated show, Dakota not only narrated all ten episodes, but starred as Alie, a half alien, who is at the center of a drama that pits her character’s parents against the government.

CHRISTOPHER WALKEN (Rayburn) was nominated in 2003 for the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his role as the father of a young con artist played by Leonardo DiCaprio in Steven Spielberg’s CATCH ME IF YOU CAN. Walken won the 1978 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his astonishing performance in Michael Cimino’s THE DEER HUNTER, a role that also earned him the New York Film Critics Circle Award and a Golden Globe nomination.

Walken’s film career skyrocketed after his unforgettable role as Duane Hall, brother to Diane Keaton’s title character in Woody Allen’s Oscar-winning Best Picture, ANNIE HALL. Since then, Walken has appeared in more than 50 feature films including Herbert Ross’ Oscar-nominated PENNIES FROM HEAVEN; David Cronenberg’s adaptation of Stephen King’s THE DEAD ZONE; James Foley’s AT CLOSE RANGE, opposite Sean Penn; Mike Nichol’s BILOXI BLUES, based on the Neil Simon play; Abel Ferrara’s gritty crime drama KING OF NEW YORK; and Joe Roth’s comedy, AMERICA’S SWEETHEARTS, co-starring Julia Roberts, Billy Crystal, and John Cusack.

Recently, Walken has succeeded in creating some of the most memorable characters in film history, appearing in supporting and cameo roles such as Vincenzo Coccotti in Tony Scott’s TRUE ROMANCE, Captain Koons in Quentin Tarantino’s PULP FICTION, Carlo Bartolucci in SUICIDE KINGS, the Headless Horseman in Tim Burton’s SLEEPY HOLLOW, and crooked businessman Max Shreck in Burton’s BATMAN RETURNS.

Walken’s upcoming films include Barry Levinson’s ENVY, with Ben Stiller and Jack Black; THE STEPFORD WIVES, with Nicole Kidman; and AROUND THE BEND, with Michael Caine. Walken began acting and dancing at the age of 10. He trained to be a dancer at the Professional Children’s School in Manhattan and eventually went on to appear in numerous stage plays and musicals. He received the Clarence Derwent Award for his performance in the Broadway production of THE LION IN WINTER, an Obie Award for his role in THE SEAGULL, a Theatre World Award for THE ROSE TATTOO, and the 1997 Susan Stein Shiva Award for his work with Joseph Papp’s Public Theater.

In the summer of 2001, Walken again appeared in a revival of Chekhov’s THE SEAGULL for the New York Shakespeare Festival, directed by Mike Nichols, opposite Meryl Streep and Kevin Kline. In the Fall of 1999, he co-starred in the stage adaptation of James Joyce’s THE DEAD. On television, Walken has hosted “Saturday Night Live” six times since 1990, contributed a mesmerizing dance performance to the Spike Jonze-directed music video for Fat Boy Slim’s “Weapon of Choice,” and wrote and directed the short film POPCORN SHRIMP, which premiered on Showtime in 2001.

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