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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, December 9, 2005

Clooney likes plot to tickle our brain

By Terry Lawson
Detroit Free Press

George Clooney is opting for transparency when it comes to "Syriana," in theaters nationwide today.

"It's complicated, confusing even. And it's political. I'm not trying to sidestep that. I'm pleased about it."

Clooney, who plays a veteran CIA agent frustrated at the way the agency has become politicized, is also the film's producer, along with Steven Soderbergh.

"Syriana" was inspired in part by a book by former intelligence agent Robert Baer, a Mideast specialist who is the basis for Clooney's character, Bob Barnes. But Stephen Gaghan, the Oscar-winning writer of "Traffic" who directed and wrote "Syriana," says the movie is "pure imagination — based on fact."

Gaghan went on something of an 18-month magical mystery tour to research "Syriana." Like "Traffic," it tells four stories:

  • Barnes, put out to pasture after an assignment gone wrong and ready for retirement, is recruited to do a job that, should it go wrong, will put an end to his career anyway.

  • An oil analyst (Matt Damon) becomes close to Prince Nasir (Alexander Siddig), who wants to democratize his oil-rich emirate, should he be named his father's successor.

  • The sole black (Jeffrey Wright) at a powerful Washington, D.C., law firm is assigned to run the due diligence required by the FTC in a merger between two oil companies whose bosses — a genteel power broker played by Christopher Plummer and a bootstraps corner-cutter played by Chris Cooper — have very different temperaments and world views.

  • Back in the emirate, two Pakistanis unable to get work or keep work permits are radicalized by a local cleric.

    "It all grew out of what I read and experienced," Gaghan says. "When I met Bob, he would tell me these stories about the interconnections, how business gets done, and I figured about half of them were true and the other half were embellished. After all, this guy has serious skills in disinformation. One day, he says, 'Look, I'm going to this party in France, you might find it interesting, you want to tag along?' "

    Clooney confirms that there was another plot line that was filmed and cut from "Syriana"; in fact, he says, there were two.

    "But the movie was confusing enough as it was, and we didn't want people to just throw up their hands," he says.

    "What we always wanted to make was a movie that made people think all the way through: How is this connected to that? What interest does he have in this? Where does all this fit in? We're so used to having all the dots connected for us that movies don't stimulate us. I like having my brain tickled. I like movies where the lines between the good guys and the bad guys are hard to discern. And I like movies that tell me things I didn't know — or maybe I didn't even want to know."