Fuming for two months in a jail cell in Los Angeles, California, Nakoula Basseley Nakoula has had plenty of time to reconsider the wisdom of making Innocence of Muslims, his crude YouTube movie trailer depicting the Prophet Muhammad as a bloodthirsty, philandering thug.Rico says he's still dubious that there's a full-length movie in the can, but who knows?
Does Nakoula now regret the footage? After all, it fueled deadly protests across the Islamic world and led the unlikely filmmaker to his own arrest for violating his supervised release on a fraud conviction.
Not at all. In his first public comments since his incarceration soon after the video gained international attention in September, Nakoula told The New York Times that he would go to great lengths to convey what he called “the actual truth” about Muhammad. “I thought, before I wrote this script,” he said, “that I should burn myself in a public square to let the American people and the people of the world know this message that I believe in.”
In explaining his reasons for the film, Nakoula, 55, a Coptic Christian born in Egypt, cited the 2009 massacre at Fort Hood, Texas as a prime example of the violence committed “under the sign of Allah”. His anger seemed so intense over the years that, even from a federal prison in 2010, he followed the protests against the building of an Islamic center and mosque near Ground Zero in New York City as he continued to work on his movie script.
Until now, only the barest details were known about the making of the film that inspired international outrage. Initial reports made it seem as if the film had been thrown together in about a year. But a longer, more intricate and somewhat surreal story emerges from interviews with Nakoula, church and law enforcement officials, and more than a dozen people who worked on the movie— those who knew its real subject and those who were tricked into believing it was to be a sword-and-sandal epic called Desert Warriors. Together, they paint a picture of a financially desperate man with a penchant for fiction who was looking to give meaning and means to a life in shambles.
There is a dispute about how important the video was in provoking the terrorist assault on the American diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya that killed the United States ambassador and three other Americans. Militants interviewed at the scene said they were unaware of the video until a protest in Cairo called it to their attention. But the video without question led to protests across the globe, beginning in Cairo and spreading rapidly in September to Yemen, Morocco, Iran, Tunisia, Sudan, Iraq, Pakistan, Lebanon, Indonesia, and Malaysia.
The making of the film is a bizarre tale of fake personas and wholesale deception. And as with almost everything touched over the years by Nakoula— a former gas station manager, bong salesman, methamphetamine ingredient supplier, and convicted con man— it is almost impossible to separate fact from fabrication.
A few years ago, Nakoula told some of the crew members he had gathered, supposedly to make Desert Warriors, that the project would have to be put off. He had cancer. Treatment was needed, far away, and they would not be able to reach him. His family shared a similar story with church officials.
Nakoula, it turns out, was not going away for cancer treatment, although the time did overlap with the prison sentence for bank fraud, which the crew knew nothing about. (Nakoula pleaded guilty this month to violating his supervised release in that case and received a one-year sentence.) He claims that he only wrote the film— five versions of the script— and served as a “cultural consultant”. One of Nakoula’s sons, Abanob Basseley Nakoula, 21, said in an interview that his father had written the script in Arabic and then translated it into English. The son said he helped him with grammar.
But Nakoula, who described himself to some cast members as the writer and producer, explained to a confidant that his plan was to fool actors into thinking they were making a movie built around an ancient tribal villain named George, dubbing in Muhammad later whenever anybody said George.
As early as 2008, he had cobbled together a twenty-page treatment for a film he wanted to call The First Terrorist.
In Nakoula’s responses to questions from The Times, conveyed through his lawyer, Steve Seiden, he had no second thoughts about the way he had handled the cast. “They had signed contracts before they went in front of any camera, and these contracts in no way prevented changes to the script or movie,” he said.
Abanob Nakoula said: “The actors were misled. My dad thought the film would create a stir, and as a precaution for their safety, there are no acting or production credits at the end of the trailer or the full-length movie.”
The amateurish project might have disappeared quietly, the way many forgettable messes do in Hollywood’s underbelly. Yet, three years after completing his script treatment, Nakoula was on a makeshift movie set inside the suburban Los Angeles headquarters of a nonprofit organization called Media for Christ, whose founder has been critical of Islam. There Nakoula was surrounded by actors wearing false beards, and there was a goat slipping on a tile floor. Alongside him was his director for hire: Alan Roberts, known for soft-core pornography movies like The Happy Hooker Goes Hollywood.
Nakoula noted that the head of Media for Christ, Joseph Nassralla Abdelmasih, was “a friend for five years”. Abdelmasih attended the 2010 protests against the Islamic center near Ground Zero. Other contacts in the world of anti-Islam activism would also play pivotal roles. Helping to publicize the film were Morris Sadek and Elaia Basily— activist Copts living in Northern Virginia— and Terry Jones, the Florida preacher whose own Quran burnings had stirred violence abroad.
That Nakoula is a hard man to pin down is no accident. He told the cast and crew that his name was Sam Bassil, which he sometimes spelled differently. Federal prosecutors convicted him in 2010 under the name Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, but he recently admitted to the court that he had changed his name in 2002 to Mark Basseley Youssef.
What he did not mention at the time, however, was that in 2009, according to court records, he changed his name yet again, this time to Ebrahem Fawzy Youssef. (His lawyer said Nakoula was unaware until recently that the latest change had been finalized.)
Facts presented by Nakoula as rock solid tend to weaken upon inspection. For instance, he told federal probation officials that he first came to Los Angeles in 1984 for the Olympics as part of the Egyptian soccer team. But a website listing official players on that team does not include Nakoula. Nor was there evidence that he was on the squad’s staff.
He claimed during production that the budget for the film was five million dollars, raised mainly from Jewish donors. Actually, it cost no more than eighty thousand dollars, apparently raised through his second ex-wife’s Egyptian family and donations from other Copts, according to a person who discussed the financing with him.
Even though the shoot lasted only fifteen days, there was enough footage for a feature-length movie, which exists, running roughly one hour and forty minutes. Basily, the Virginia activist who has donated to Media for Christ, said he watched the entire film on DVD early this year and found it historically accurate.
All that has been seen on the Web is the fourteen-minute YouTube trailer, which, by the time it hit the Internet in July, was titled Innocence of Muslims.
Nakoula was able to finish the project even though people who ran into him over the years found him puzzling. When he rented offices in suburban Los Angeles, other tenants noticed that he came around only at night for the most part and stored stacks of Marlboro cartons there, among other things. When he took a stall at a flea market to sell drug paraphernalia and tobacco merchandise, other stall holders noted that his wares never seemed to move and that he spent most of his time on the phone, shouting in Arabic.
And Coptic Church officials said they considered Nakoula an unlikely candidate for the kind of religious zeal behind Innocence of Muslims because he had attended services so infrequently. But Nakoula said fervor and witnessing persecution are what drove him to create the film.
Nakoula agreed last month to be interviewed by The Times at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles, where he has been held since his September arrest. But the warden refused to allow the interview.In his written responses to questions, Nakoula reeled off “atrocities” by Muslims that went back many years and formed his views, focusing on shootings, a bombing and the torture of his fellow Copts. After the Fort Hood massacre, in which an Army psychiatrist with ties to Muslim extremism has been charged, “I became even more upset and enraged,” he said.
Abanob Nakoula said: “My dad is not an evil man. He has had a hard life. He did something— the movie, something he felt strongly about— that was not frowned upon by the Constitution. He would always say: ‘Don’t fight Muslims; fight their ideology.’ ”
Nakoula Basseley Nakoula grew up in Egypt, but came to the United States and wed Ingrid N. Rodriguez in 1986 in Nevada, according to state marriage records. They divorced in 1990, the records show. Soon afterward, while living in California, he married an Egyptian woman, Olivia Ibrahim, with whom he has three children. Although the couple divorced, the family members all lived together on a cul-de-sac in Cerritos until going into hiding after the video spread.
Nakoula declared bankruptcy in 2000. By then he was a felon: a police sting caught him trading crates of a methamphetamine ingredient for $45,000 in cash. He was sentenced to one year in prison but did community service instead. A little over a decade later, Nakoula, while at work on his movie, was arrested for bank fraud. He was behind bars for almost 21 months before getting out in the summer of last year.
“He said it might have been a blessing to go to prison because he had time to work on the script,” his son said.
Nakoula’s supervised release barred him from using aliases. But he resumed work on his movie under the name Sam Baccil, said Jimmy Israel, who assisted with preproduction. Israel, who still thought Nakoula had been away battling cancer, placed casting notices on Backstage.com. One advertised eleven roles that included “George: male, 20-40, a strong leader, romantic, tyrant, a killer with no remorse, accent.” Israel said Nakoula told him that “Muhammad would be named George to mislead the actors.”
Nakoula found his director through a circuitous route. During the time of his bank fraud scheme, he rented five offices in a building owned by a man named Shlomo Bina, who, as it happened, had once aspired to a movie career, too, crossing paths with Roberts, the director. Chatting one day, Bina pointed him toward Roberts, whose real name is Robert Alan Brownell, records show. Attempts to reach Roberts through lawyers were unsuccessful.
A few Coptic immigrants in the United States have built media outlets with the help of programming that is anything but favorable toward Islam. One of them is Abdelmasih of Media for Christ. Not only did he provide Nakoula with ten days of free studio space, but he also helped get the promotion going for the YouTube trailer by contacting Sadek in Virginia.
Sadek wrote in an email that “my friend,” Abdelmasih, “told me that Nakoula had created a movie about the Copts’ persecution in Egypt.” Sadek then publicized the YouTube trailer on his website and to his contacts. Basily, the activist, also spread word about the trailer using social media. Sadek also put Nakoula in touch with another important promotional partner: Jones, the Florida pastor.
Abdelmasih said Nakoula called one day to ask to use his facility. “He said to me the movie was about persecution of Christians by the government, combined with radical Muslims,” Abdelmasih recalled in an interview.
Media for Christ provided no cameras or any other production help, Abdelmasih said. He also insisted that Media for Christ’s “work is not against Muslims,” and he said he was “shocked” by the final product. But his studio has been used to produce Wake Up America, a program hosted by Steve Klein, an insurance salesman in Hemet, California and a staunch anti-Islam activist. Klein served as a consultant for Nakoula after they first met at Media for Christ.
When Dan Sutter, cast as George’s grandfather, arrived at Media for Christ’s offices in early August of last year, Nakoula was there, greeting people as Sam. Mel Gibson’s Passion of the Christ played on a television in a break room.
Eight months or so after shooting ended, Nakoula ontacted a few of the actors to return to Media for Christ for looping, a standard part of moviemaking in which inaudible dialogue is rerecorded. Lily Dionne, an extra with no lines who was called to dub for another actress, said that a fellow actor had also been asked back and that Nakoula told him to say Muhammad into a microphone. He did.
On 2 July, the trailer was posted on YouTube by someone using the name Sam Bacile. Nakoula s son said he was the one who did it. “My dad is not tech-savvy at all, and does not know how to work social media,” Abanob Nakoula said. “So he asked me to take the initiative to spread the word, and I did my best.” He explained that, using the name Sam Bacile, he created a Facebook account before production started and then the YouTube account. Abanob Nakoula added, “My dad wanted to show the trailer on television as a commercial, and I told him that was not going to happen because it costs a lot of money and the networks would not show a fourteen-minute trailer, especially if they knew the content.”
27 November 2012
Innocence? Nah.
Serge Kovaleski and Brooks Barnes have an article in The New York Times about a bad movie made for bad reasons:
No comments:
Post a Comment
No more Anonymous comments, sorry.